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Specific objectives are to analyze the formation of Que Vo IZ and its employment provision for land loss households; analyze employment transition after land loss; and analyze the usage

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Land loss for industrial zones and rural employment

Mất đất do xây dựng khu công nghiệp và việc làm nông thôn

Ngo Trung Thanh

Faculty of political and social science

TÓM TẮT Sau 15 năm phát triển, Việt Nam đã xây dựng được 49 khu công nghiệp tập trung tại 61 tỉnh, thành phố Tuy nhiên, tỷ lệ lao động của các hộ mất đất để xây dựng khu công nghiệp có được việc làm từ các khu công nghiệp là thấp Vậy tại sao lao động của các hộ này thất bại trong quá trình chuyển đổi nghề nghiệp, bao gồm thất bại trong quá trình tìm kiếm việc làm tại các khu công nghiệp

và tạo việc làm từ các khoản được đền bù? Bài viết này dựa trên nghiên cứu sự ảnh hưởng của khu công nghiệp tới việc làm nông thôn để làm rõ vấn đề trên

Từ khóa: Khu công nghiệp, mất đất, việc làm

SUMMARY During more than 15 years of development, IZs have appeared in 49 of 61 provinces and cities of Vietnam However, the proportion of labor in land loss households accessed to employment opportunities in the industrial zone is low So, why the labor of land loss household failed to get alternative employment, including the employment provided by the enterprise in the IZ and the employment generated by compensation? This article reports on a study of the impact of industrial zones on rural employment to contribute at understanding this

Key words: Employment, industrial zone, land loss

1 INTRODUCTION

To date, industrial zones (IZs) or export

processing zones (EPZs) are common all over the

world, and applied to attract investments to boost

national economy In fact, these zones provide a

huge number of non farm employment (Huang,

2001; ILO, 2002; ILO, 2007; Rondinelli, 1987)

The success of IZs in term of employment

generation can be explained that their field of

production is based on labor intensive industries

which find in early stage of industry development

in developing countries The industries attracted to

the zones are predominantly food processing,

garment and textile, electrical appliance and

components, metal product, optical instrument, and

toys and crafts manufacturing and assembling

activities that depend on cheap labor to perform

routine and repetitive tasks (Rondinelli, 1987)

Actually, the zones generated employment for

women rather than man (Amirahmadi & Wu, 1995;

ILO, 2002; ILO, 2007; Kusago & Tzannatos, 1998; Ramanayak, 1982; Reigstad, 2007; Rondinelli, 1987) The employment created by the zones is considered as instability and low wages (ILO, 2002; Jauch, 2002; Kusago & Tzannatos, 1998; Rondinelli, 1987; Sricharatchany, 1983)

During more than 15 years of development, IZs have appeared in 49 of 61 provinces and cities of Vietnam (Huy, 2007) One of the aims of IZs is to create employment for people living around, but it seems to be a failure rather than a gain Dung (2006) found that the IZs provided about 960 thousand employments, but they caused the loss of 680 employment of land loss households (Phong, 2006) Within the land loss households, on average, 1.5 labors per household have lost their work.13 labors per ha have been lost their work in agriculture During 2000-2004, 50 percent of labors that lost their agriculture work due to land conversion have been fallen into unemployment (Cuong, 2006) Moreover, the proportion of laborers employed from

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the households that lost agricultural land for building

IZs is low, even of retrained labor The survey of

ADB (2005) found that the employment created by

IZs for land loss households is eight percent of

interviewed households in Long An and Can Tho,

and five percent in Vinh Phuc and Ha Tay It also

showed that more than 60 percent of land conversion

households can generate more income after land

conversion For the rest, it causes disruption in

household economy, particularly if all productive

landholdings are lost, residence is disrupted,

insufficient notice is given by the local authorities

and family members do not have appropriate

educational background or vocational skills to shift

into new occupations Furthermore, the scale of state

support to land loss households appears to vary

between provinces, but is generally low Access to

retraining opportunities was 28 percent of surveyed

households in Binh Dinh, two percent in Quang

Nam, and four percent in Long An and Can Tho

(ADB, 2005)

In case of labors in the land loss households

paid themselves for extra education or training at

vocational schools, many of them could not find a

job In Ha Noi, for each 1,000 land loss people,

there are 190 with self payment education or

training, and 100 people who could not find job

This number is 300 and 180 in Bac Ninh province;

450 and 350 in Can Tho province (Cuong, 2006)

So, why the labor of land loss household

failed to get alternative employment, including the

employment provided by the enterprise in the IZ

and the employment generated by compensation?

The overall objective of study is to analyze impact

of industrial zones on rural employment Specific

objectives are to analyze the formation of Que Vo

IZ and its employment provision for land loss

households; analyze employment transition after

land loss; and analyze the usage of compensation

with the link to generation of alternative

employment of land loss households

2 METHODS

The case study was conducted in Bac Ninh

which is the smallest province of Vietnam It has

50.8 percent of agricultural land converted to the

building of IZs Compared to other provinces, this

proportion of Bac Ninh ranked second, after Ha

Tay (Cuong, 2006) To 2006, four IZs had been

established with 1956 ha As provincial plan, the

number of IZs will increase to 8, and area will

widen to about 3000 ha in the period of 2010-2015

Within four existing IZs, Que Vo and Tien Son are the largest ones They all have 300 ha and have already operated The land for Que Vo IZ was converted from agricultural land of Van Duong, Nam Son and Phuong Lieu commune Son Trung and Thai Bao village in Nam Son commune was chosen for analyzing because they all relied agriculture before the building of the Que Vo IZ Currently, Son Trung does not loss agricultural land, meanwhile, Thai Bao has lost ninety percent

of agricultural land for the Que Vo IZ

The data collected includes the way Que Vo

IZ was formed, the changes of employment before and after the building of Que Vo IZ, the usage of compensation and other assistances, and some reasons of the failure of villagers in getting employed by enterprises in the IZ The qualitative data was obtained by group discussion interviews and in-depth interviews The quantitative data was collected by surveying 134 households, of which,

82 households that had their agricultural land loss (in Thai Bao village) and 52 households that remain agricultural land (Son Trung village) These households account for 30 percent of both surveyed villages It was analyzed by using descriptive statistic such as mean, frequency, crosstab Comparing these villages before and after land loss has been used as analytical framework At survey time, land acquisition and compensation delivery have already finished for a year, so it is considered

as the time after land loss

3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

3.1 How Que Vo IZ was formed? - Organizational relations

At the end of 1990s and early of 2000s, Bac Ninh’s provincial government planned to convert low productivity of agricultural land to industrial purpose, including Que Vo district After the plan was approved by Mr Prime Minister in 2001, the Provincial People’s committee started organizing auction for leasing industrial land The Kinh Bac, a private infrastructure development investor, won a tender for leasing 300 ha of agricultural land converted to industrial purpose in Que Vo district However, the formation of Que Vo IZ did not bring advantage for the labor of land loss households in term of getting employed by the enterprises in the

IZ

In order to mange all IZs, Bac Ninh’s provincial government set up a IZs Management

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Board It acts as a provincial administrator The

main functions of IZs Management Board are

managing, monitoring enterprise business activities,

and reducing administrative procedure for

enterprises in order to attract investment to the IZs

Generating employment for IZs has been promoted

by the center of IZ service belonging to IZs

Management Board However, the Board does not

have the function to enforce the enterprises to

giving priority for employment of the laborers who

have lost land as compared to other laborers

The owner of Que Vo IZ is Kinh Bac, a

private infrastructure development company that

builds relevant infrastructure and sub-leases land to

enterprises While leasing land, the enterprises in

the IZ have no duty to commit themselves to

employing laborers of households who lost land

rather than other laborers The Labor Law says that

these enterprises have a right to directly employ

their labor In fact, they did not distinguish between

local and ex-local labor, they just employ the

laborers who have ability working for them In

addition, in conducting sub-leasing contract with

the enterprise, Kinh Bac has no reason to cause

difficulty for his customers by adding employment

requirements for local labor

At the commune level, although authorities

play an important role in land acquiring process,

they have less function in term of generating

alternative employment for land loss household According to the Commune People’s Committee, all assistance proposals for employment have to go through district to provincial level with the hope that upper level can find a solution Actually, there

is no reason for commune authorities to send their employment proposals to the enterprises that sub-lease land from Kinh Bac Company

At household level, on one hand, the land loss households had to delivery their land to the Kinh Bac according to decision of provincial government On the other, these households relate

to the enterprises that sub-leased land from Kinh Bac through labor market in term of employment (Annex 1) So, these connections might cause disadvantage to the land loss households in getting employed by enterprises in the IZ

3.2 Employment provision

During 2005 - 2007, the number of employment provided by the Que Vo IZ is increasingly, from 590 in 2005 to more than 9000

in 2007, including about 3300 local labors Compared to other zones in Bac Ninh, Que Vo created the highest employment in term of volume (Table 1) However, Que Vo IZ contribute to employment provision of around areas, including land loss households This section will address this issue

Table 1 Employment provision of the IZs in Bac Ninh during 2005-2007

Unit: Labor

Industrial zones

Source: IZ employment report, Department of Labor, Bac Ninh IZ Management Board

1

September 2007

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Table 2 Direct employment in Thai Bao and Son Trung village

Unit:

Person

Source: village statistic, 2007

Table 3 Business households in Thai Bao before and after land acquisition

Source: Data from fieldwork

The data collected in Son Trung and Thai Bao

village also shows that few villagers got employed

by enterprises at Que Vo IZ About 20 percent of

labor in Son Trung and 40 percent in Thai Bao

found employment in the zone Among these labor,

women count for a larger part For example, 25 of

33 labor in Son Trung and 37 of 59 labor who work

at enterprises in the IZ are women (see table 2)

This result agrees with a argument of Rondinelli

(1987), Amirahmadi & Wu (1995), Kusago &

Tzannatos (1998), ILO (2002) and Reigstad

(Reigstad, 2007) that the IZs provide direct non

farm employment for women rather than man The

explanation made by Amirahmadi & Wu (1995) is

that the industries in most zones are electronics and

textile and clothing manufacturing that require

unskilled or semi-skilled production workers which

is dominated by women

Besides providing direct employment as

worker at factories, Que Vo IZ also generated

business activities for villagers These activities

include buying and selling of grocery, providing rooms for rent, and serving meals for workers renting their rooms (see table 3) Such businesses attract villagers who are over 30 years old However, these activities are more common in Thai Bao which is closer to Que Vo IZ than Son Trung However, in Thai Bao business activities have just been developed by households along with the district road that crosses the village Others, far away from that road, have not been seen such change (see box 2) Of the households far from the road has been observed as running small shops in front of the IZ gate They sell soft drink, tobacco, biscuits, etc to workers

For people over 30 years old who can not run

a business, the IZ could provide them hired work for construction At the initial stage of constructing Que Vo IZ, such work was more common But, how long does it last or what happen to those labors after construction of the IZ complete? Luckier villagers could find employment as security guard,

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cooker or office servant in the IZ, but this is also few

Box 1 Working as hired labor but it reduces every year

She is 35 years old and her husband is 38 Their eldest son has just finished high

school last year, the other son still goes to school Like other villagers, prior to losing

land they had 1800 m2, and just worked on farm only Currently they retain more than

200 m2 of agricultural land It just provides food for their family for 3 months, so they

can not rear pigs As Mrs Ng calculated, buying feed for rearing pigs is rather

expensive, and they do not gain profit Mrs Ng also said that they had no choice for

generating household’s income, except working as hired labor for construction work

in Que Vo IZ In 2002-2004 they could work whole year in the IZ, but in 2005 they

just worked for 8 months, and 6 month in 2006 on average If the work was more as it

was in 2002-2004, most of their wage could be saved for their children, earnings from

collects waste material of construction could be spend on daily expenditure

Mrs Ng, Thai Bao village

Interview in 10 August 2007

Source: Data collection from fieldwork

Why villagers failed to get employed by the

enterprises in Que Vo IZ?

Besides formation of Que Vo IZ did not help

labors of land loss households get employment

Group discussions in Thai Bao also show that

villagers failed to get employed by the enterprises

in Que Vo IZ due to requirement of employers,

“black transaction”, low wage and instable

employment, and hiring strategy of the

enterprises

Requirement of employers

As employment recruitment noted in front of

factories gates or in the local newspaper, the

factories always require labor in the age of 18 -25,

so the others, including the labor in the land loss

households who is over that age are excluded

Copping with these requirements, some villagers

who is over 18-25 had tried to get fake ID card or

graduate certification to meet the employers’

requirements

Additionally, gender requirement also caused

disparity in getting employment in the IZ Some

enterprises had just required women only This

means that male labor of land loss households

could not access to employment opportunities in the IZ as well Reported by the Department of labor management in the IZs Management Board show that 66.9 percent of labor in Que Vo IZ is women Particularly, this ratio is high, 93.9 percent in the Canon factory, the largest one in terms of employment in Que Vo IZ It provides more than

40 percent employment in the IZ

“Black transaction”

In order to get a job as worker at factories in

IZ, most villagers (70-80 percent of employees, as estimated by villagers) have to pay a “black fee” to brokers Most of the brokers are Vietnamese working at factories in IZ, including gate man/security guards The fee ranges from 2 million

to 3 million, up to 12-13 million Actually, brokers fight each other; each of them has their own

“chain” Labors over the age of 25 can be employed

by going through brokers In fact, if directors of factories know their staffs involves in broking, both the staff (brokers) and worker who has been employed by brokers will be sacked

In cases when employers come to the village

to employ labor, corruption might occur Some of

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the villagers were denied to be recruited; even they

were on the age that meets enterprises’

requirements Villagers had tried to illustrate by

showing their age by showing their ID card, but it

was not accepted Some villagers over 18 - 25 year olds tried to ask the village head to propose employers extending their requirements on the range age, however, he did not agree

Box 2 The discouragement of getting employed by the factory

Through an interview, she was employed by the boss of the factory (foreigners) and

has worked for factory for two months (probation period) But then, personal

department of the factory set appointment with her so many times that she was

discouraged (she assumed that staff in that department wanted her bribe?)

Her sister got credit to pay for employment in IZ, but she was sacked after two months,

and now she has no ability to repay

Mrs A, Thai Bao village

Interview on June 27th 2007

Source: Data collection from fieldwork

Low wage and Instable employment

As perceived by land loss villagers, working at

factories in Que Vo IZ is instable The group

discussion in Thai Bao shows that some villagers

might accept to pay a high “black fee” for brokers,

even getting credit with interest for that fee, but the

instability of a job in IZ blocks their payment On the

villager’s side, instability is considered as a short

labor contract Usually, the contract lasts for 1 - 2

years only, so villagers worry about their

employment afterward; another is lack of

transparency in terms of shacking In Thai Bao,

many laborers have been sacked after 2 months of

working at the factory without clear explanations;

female labors might be sacked because they get

pregnant after their wedding On the side of IZs

Management Board, instability is caused by seasonal

production of factories, depending on their orders

Hiring strategy

Some of the enterprises usually hire labor

during a probation/trial period (two to three

months) only, because the employers just have to

pay two thirds of employee’s wage (usually it is

quite low), and they do not have to pay worker’s

health insurance After the probation period,

workers have been sacked without clear

explanations, and then employers recruit other new

labor for next three months According to a

university educated employee in Que Vo IZ, a high

school labor needs only 6-7 days to become

familiar with the work at Longtech factory, so three

months is a too long period of probation This was

also found in Bangladesh when some enterprises

were known to use the apprentice/training salary as

a means of exploiting workers who were paid the training salary for six months even though they can learn the job in two or three months (Dowla, 1997)

Employment transformation

Before the building of the IZ, farm employment was dominated in both Thai Bao and SonTrung village (see figure 1 and 2) After that, the consequences are quite different in those villages

Through surveying 231 labors in 82 households in Thai Bao, including 144 farm labors and 45 labors just finishing high school shows that farm employment has reduced after the building

of IZ In 144 farm labors, 73 keep working on farm, 18 moves to work as factories worker, 33 as hired labor for construction work in Que Vo IZ, and 15 of them run their own business of buying and selling in the village Half of labors keep working on farm because small agricultural land is still available after land acquisition; even it is much smaller than before Within 82 households surveyed, the average agricultural land remained

is about 720 square meters compared to 3094 square meters before land acquisition (see annex 2 and 3) Besides, some of households try to generate more employment by leasing more paddy land in other villages or communes Such case was found at households that received small compensation As observed in Thai Bao, this strategy is usually based on kinship These labors are in the households that have a daughter in-law

or son in-law coming from other villages or communes, and they leased more paddy land from

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their parents, their relatives, and their friends (see

box 4) The shift from farm to off farm

employment was not seen in Thai Bao village as

90 percent of agricultural land had been converted

to build the IZ Thus, there is no more land for

generating off farm activities There is no

evidence that villagers have worked off-farm in

other villages or communes

Besides farm employment, the transformation

happened strongly in the labors that just finish

high school In 45 labors, 31 got an employment

as IZ worker after the building of IZ These labors

has an advantage for the IZ worker compared to

others because they meet employer’s requirement

in term of age and doing some test during

interview this found in Son Trung village as well

In Son Trung, the agricultural land has not been

converted to industrial purpose, so the reduction of

farm employment is not much The survey of 108 farm labors in 52 households shows 84 of them keep working on farm, 11 are workers at factories, three work as hire labor for construction work at Que Vo IZ, and two moved to run buying and selling business It can be explained that as agricultural land is available, villagers can grow vegetables as cash crop They perceived that growing vegetable is easier than working as hired labor for construction work in IZ For them, hired labor is considered as seasonality only However, three villagers prefer to work as hired labor in IZ rather than as off farm employment in the planting and harvesting season because of higher wages At the previous crop, the labor price (one labor per day) was 30 thousand VND for planting or harvesting, meanwhile, it was 40 thousand VND for construction work

Fig.1 Employment in Thai Bao before and after land loss

Source: Data from fieldwork on October, 2007 – Thai Bao village

Scho

ol

Farm

Driv

er

Knit ting

Doo

uard

Job

seek

ing

Tailo

r

Buy

in

and se

ng H ired

labo r

IZ w

orke r

State

offic er

Fo

er s dier

C pe ry

0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

40.0

50.0

60.0

70.0

After

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Scho

ol

Hire

d la

bor

IZ w

orke r

Farm

Driv er

Stat

offi

cer Ta r

Grin

ding

Not

wor ng

Buy in

and

selli ng

Doo

r gu

ard Fo

er s

dier

Acc

ntan t

0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

40.0

50.0

60.0

70.0

Before After

Fig 2 Employment in Son Trung before and after building Que Vo IZ

Source: Data from fieldwork on October, 2007 – Son Trung village

Box 3 Alternative employment strategy

Mrs N is 38 years old and her husband is 39 The have 6 children, and currently the household has 3 main labors only Before land loss, their livelihood depended on farm only They had 2160 m2 of agricultural land and 1908m2 of it had been converted to industrial purpose with 53 millions VND of compensation Mr N spent 18 of 53 millions VND on residential land Most of the rest of the compensation has been sent to the bank for their children education Because they did not know how to run a business like some other villagers, they decided to keep working in agriculture, so they leased more agricultural land (1440m2) in a neighbour commune through introduction of the husband’s friend For that land they pay in kind at 50kg of rice per 360m2 Due to IZ construction, the irrigation system was broken and working on the field away made household’s labor work harder; three of six children also participated on that work in planting, weeding and harvest season even though they are school age They also bought a cow for tilling, and the children looked after it They hope that a calf will be born, and then it can generate more income for the household

Mrs N, now, mainly takes care for rice field and husbandry, her husband tries to work as hired labor in IZ When IZ started its construction, her husband could work 10 to 12 month per year in IZ, however, since last year (2006) he had worked 6 month in IZ only In July of

2007, her husband and some of other villagers went to a neighbour province to work Mrs N also said that the age of her husband is over the factory’s requirement for workers

Mrs N, Thai Bao village

Interview in 26 October 2007

The building of Que Vo IZ did not effect on

the employments of those already work on

non-farm sector As shown in the figure 1, employment

in knitting and carpentry are unchanged before and

after Que Vo IZ was built In addition, doing

carpentry can gain more in compared to before

building the IZ due to the increased demand of rooms for rent

Does compensation help villagers generate alternative non farm employment?

Normally, compensation went to land loss households in three types The first is by cash for

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land loss and vocational support The second, land

loss households have a right to buy a piece of

residential land, and send their labor to one week

vocational training course on embroidery supported

by provincial government organizing at commune

office

The group discussions and a survey of land

loss households in Thai Bao village show that most

compensation by cash has been used for building

new houses and buying a piece of residential land

(see figure 2) As explained by villagers, building a

new house has been prioritized, because if they did

not, they might have had no more chance in their

life Concerning this point, Nang (2006), in her

case study in Tho Da village, has concluded that it

brought economic effectiveness in terms of

opportunity cost (due to increasing price

construction material) as well as physical asset

However, in terms of employment generation, such

physical assets might not be useful for farmers who

have had about 90 percent of their agricultural land claimed

In Thai Bao, for households that had registered buying residential land, the payment had been settled by local authority right after villagers receiving compensation On the other hand, building a new house costs almost all of their compensation So, the compensation that was used for regenerating alternative employment was not much Moreover, many villagers hoped that residential land would be sold at a high price afterward This assumption led villager to borrow more money from relatives or even from the bank, with interest, to build a house In fact, many households are in dept due to not selling residential land yet

For the last support, it seems not to be helpful because of the market of embroidery product Villagers do not know where to sell their product According to observation in the village, there is no household working on embroidery

Fig 3 Compensation use in Thai Bao village

Source: Household survey

4 CONCLUSION

In general, Que Vo IZ provides non farm

employment and it has increased annually since

2005, and like IZs in other regions, women have

benefit more than man in term of employment

generation However, the land loss households

failed to get employed by the enterprises in the IZ

due to weak connections among local government,

enterprises in the IZ and land loss households in term of employment generation, requirement of employers, ‘black transaction”, low wage and instability of employment, and the hiring strategy

of enterprises

If we look at the operation mechanism of the

IZ the labors in the land loss households can only look for priority of alternative employment in the

IZ through local authorities, meanwhile, the enterprises have just related to local authorities

ra

in

in in

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administratively In fact, young labors themselves

have competed with labors from other areas to be

an IZ worker, and the others also themselves have

generated alternative by using compensation and

support However, the compensation and other

assistance have not been used effectively in term of

generating alternative employment, and it makes

villagers’ living in difficulty Actually, providing

residential land as a support for alternative

employment needs to be considered if the “red

book” is not available yet

Moreover, at the early of the IZ operation

there was not transparency in term of recruitment

information causing “black transaction” which

prevented some land loss households accessing to

employment opportunities It might be a difference

for labor from other areas, but, from land loss

household’s perception they do not accept it

because their main mean of production has

provided to the zone Although, few cases can

accept “black transaction”, some enterprises have

uses a hiring strategy that make villagers feel

instable while working in the IZ They had sacked

off worker without clear explanation

The study found the evidences that

employment has shifted from farm to non farm

employment due to most agricultural land in Thai

Bao has been converted to the building of Que Vo

IZ However, half of farm labor in Thai Bao and

more a half of farm labor in Son Trung keep

working on farm shows that agriculture works still

play an important role on transition period of

industrialization process It agrees with Scott

(1976) that farmers always set food security as their

first priority

All above issues are short term effects of the

building of the IZ In the long term, the non farm

employment created by construction work in the IZ

might not be sustainable What will happen to these

laborers when the IZ complete? Does it increase the

pressure on out migration to cities?

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