A Myanmar delegation led by Union Minister for Labour U Aung Kyaw Hoe attended the Global Labour Market Conference 2026, held on 26-27 January in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and arrived back in Yangon on 28 January.
The
conference was convened with the aim of addressing challenges currently faced
by labour markets worldwide and creating better employment opportunities for
the future.
The first
section of the conference took place at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Riyadh on 26
January, and Mr Ahmed bin Sulaiman Al-Rajhi, Minister of Human Resources and
Social Development of Saudi Arabia, delivered an opening speech.
During the
Ministerial Roundtable themed “From Policy to Practice: Opening Immediate
Pathways to Work Amid Rapid Change”, the Union minister stated that the Global
Labour Market Conference was first initiated in 2023 to prepare young people
for technology, and that at the 2025 conference, eight effective action plans
were successfully adopted. For developing countries, the challenge is no longer
limited to future planning alone, but now requires the implementation of
practical measures to respond effectively to rapid automation, climate change,
and economic pressures.
He continued
that Myanmar is prioritizing the four key areas to change the policies into
practice.
The first
one is that efforts are being made to transform businesses from the informal
sector into the formal sector in order to ensure that employment opportunities
are accessible and inclusive for all.
The second
is to provide workers with appropriate skills. The government is collaborating
with the private sector through the National Skills Standards Authority (NSSA)
to develop occupational skills standards and to implement the Recognition of
Prior Learning (RPL) system, which assesses skills and issues recognized
certification.
The third
one is that policies are being adjusted to maintain balance in order to nurture
adaptable and resilient labour markets, and the fourth is to effectively
utilize technology and data, strengthening bilateral and multilateral
cooperation frameworks to connect cross-border labour demand and supply.
In doing so,
digital literacy should be prioritized and efforts should be made to transform
the brain drain into a brain gain situation by creating the chance for migrant
workers returning from foreign countries to be able to share and apply their
experiences and technologies for the development of the country.
Afterwards,
the labour ministers from 40 countries coordinated the discussion.
At noon, the
Union minister attended the opening ceremony of the conference held at the King
Abdulaziz International Conference Centre. In the evening, the Union minister
attended the cultural show and dinner event.
On 27
January, the Union minister met Mr Abdulwahab Alageel, General Supervisory
Executive for the Domestic Services Sector of Saudi Arabia, to discuss
labour-related matters between the two countries.
He also
attended the Labour Award Ceremony, which honoured outstanding individuals and
organizations in areas such as workplace environment improvement, occupational
safety and health, skills and training development, promotion of national
workforce utilization, and high-level management excellence within Saudi
Arabia’s labour market.
The
conference was attended by 40 ministers of labour, alongside leaders from ILO,
World Bank, international organizations, academia, the private sector, and
civil society.
MNA/KTZ
#TheGlobalNewLightOfMyanmar

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