Can mass layoffs be done in Myanmar?

Updated May 3, 2026·3 min read
Direct answer

Yes, mass layoffs are permitted in Myanmar but require the same Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 process as individual redundancies — documented business case, objective selection, tenure-based notice, full severance per Notification 84/2015, leave encashment, and 7-day final settlement. Notification to MoLES is best practice for large-scale layoffs.

What Myanmar law says

Mass layoffs (collective redundancies) are permitted under the Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 on the same lawful ground — redundancy or restructure — as individual terminations. There is no separate statute for mass layoffs, but for large-scale workforce reductions, employers commonly notify the township labour office and MoLES in advance as a matter of practice. Each affected employee is still entitled to individual tenure-based notice and severance per Notification 84/2015.

What changes for mass layoffs

  • Each employee gets their own bilingual termination letter — not a group letter.
  • Selection criteria must be applied uniformly and documented for each employee.
  • Pre-notice consultation with employees and any union/Workplace Coordinating Committee.
  • Best practice: notify the township labour office in writing before issuing letters.
  • Final settlement runs concurrently for all affected employees within 7 days of last working day.
  • SSB deregistration filed for each employee within 30 days.

Pre-layoff checklist

ItemStatus
Business case memoRequired
Selection criteria documentedRequired
Affected-employee list with tenure and salaryRequired
Notice and severance calculation per employeeRequired
Township labour office notificationBest practice
Workplace Coordinating Committee consultationIf applicable
Final settlement worksheet per employeeRequired
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What if there's a dispute

  • Township labour office first — multiple complaints from a single mass layoff are typically grouped at the same office.
  • Conciliation Body — formal conciliation under the Settlement of Labour Disputes Law.
  • Arbitration Council — final binding step. Statute of limitations: typically 6 months.

Employer takeaway

Mass layoffs are legal but require disciplined execution. Document the business case, apply objective selection, notify the township labour office in writing, issue individual bilingual termination letters, calculate notice + severance per Notification 84/2015 per employee, and run final settlement within 7 days. Deregister each employee from SSB within 30 days and retain records for at least 7 years.

For HR teams running terminations across regions
Run a clean exit, every time. QHRM runs the entire mass-layoff package — letters, severance, final settlement, SSB deregistration — in one sweep. Used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Edge cases and unenforceable clauses

  • Closing an entire entity — same ESDL severance owed; consider liquidator obligations.
  • Sale of business — TUPE-style transfer not statutorily defined; treat each separation per ESDL.
  • Selection by protected characteristic — discrimination risk.
  • See notification required for mass layoffs.

Common mass-layoff mistakes

  • Issuing a group "all-staff" termination letter rather than individual bilingual letters.
  • Skipping the business-case memo and selection-criteria documentation.
  • Paying severance late — exposes the employer to township labour office complaints.
  • Forgetting the SSB deregistration window per employee.
Sources
  1. Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 — termination grounds
  2. Notification 84/2015 (or current) — notice and severance
  3. Settlement of Labour Disputes Law — process

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