What does the Labour Organization Law 2011 cover in Myanmar?
Myanmar's Labour Organization Law 2011 establishes the right to form labour organisations (trade unions), sets a minimum of 30 employees for a basic labour organisation, defines the township → regional → state hierarchy, governs union registration and recognition, gives the right to strike with 14-day notice, excludes essential services, and prohibits retaliation against lawful organising activity.
What Myanmar law says
The Labour Organization Law 2011 is Myanmar's primary statute for trade-union rights and collective worker representation. Its core coverage areas are:
- Right to organise — employees can form a labour organisation without employer approval.
- Basic labour organisation (BLO) — workplace-level union with a 30-employee minimum.
- Hierarchy — BLO → township labour organisation → regional federation → state-level confederation.
- Registration — with the township labour office; certificate of registration evidences legal personality.
- Recognition — for collective bargaining and dispute representation.
- Right to strike — legal with 14-day prior notice; essential services excluded.
- Workplace Coordinating Committee — channel for grievance escalation in workplaces with a labour organisation.
- Anti-retaliation — protection against discipline or termination for lawful organising activity.
Coverage at a glance
| Provision | Standard |
|---|---|
| BLO minimum size | 30 employees |
| Registration body | Township labour office |
| Hierarchy | BLO → township → regional → state |
| Strike notice | 14 days |
| Essential services | Excluded from strike right |
| WCC | Channel grievances upward |
| Retaliation | Prohibited |
| Foreign nationals | Generally cannot hold leadership roles |
Edge cases
- Workplaces < 30 employees — can join a township-level federation; cannot form a stand-alone BLO.
- Recognition disputes — handled via the township labour office and Conciliation Body.
- Sympathy strikes — must follow the same 14-day notice rule.
- Lockouts — employer-side counterpart; same notice requirements.
- Multi-site groups — BLO is per-workplace; group-level federation possible at township and above.
Records and inspections
BLO registration certificates, recognition agreements, WCC minutes, strike-notice files, and bargaining records should be retained ≥ 7 years. The township labour office manages BLO registration and verifies during dispute escalation. The Conciliation Body and Arbitration Council draw on the records during collective dispute proceedings.
Employer takeaway
The Labour Organization Law 2011 covers the right to form trade unions, BLO minimum size of 30 employees, registration with the township labour office, the township-regional-state hierarchy, the right to strike with 14-day prior notice, exclusion of essential services, the Workplace Coordinating Committee channel, and anti-retaliation protection. Engage with recognised unions through the WCC and respect lawful organising activity. Retain records for 7 years.
Common mistakes
- Refusing to recognise a registered BLO that meets the 30-member threshold.
- Disciplining organisers — direct breach of anti-retaliation protections.
- Treating wildcat action as protected — it isn't without 14-day notice.
- Skipping the WCC and bargaining only at executive level — recognition runs through the WCC.
Related reading: are trade unions legal, can employees strike legally, and workplace coordinating committee.
- Labour Organization Law 2011 — Scope and core provisions
- Settlement of Labour Disputes Law — Collective dispute path
- Compliance Calendar — Records retention
Related questions
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