Plantation Labour Wage Issue
Productivity in general can be defined as obtaining more output for the same input. The two major inputs in the tea industry - land and labour - are neither as abundant nor as cheap as they were when the tea plantations were established more than 100 years ago.
Tea is among the most labour-intensive of all the plantation crops. It has both an agricultural and a manufacturing dimension. According to well-established precepts, 60 percent of the income from tea is agricultural, the balance being of an industrial nature.
Please read the article and
Read more (http://www.dailymirror.lk/68755/plantation-wage-talks-in-deadlock)
(http://www.dailynews.lk/?q=business/tea-crisis-planters-association-responds)
(http://www.dailymirror.lk/74135/tea-crisis-who-deceives-whom)
Productivity in general can be defined as obtaining more output for the same input. The two major inputs in the tea industry - land and labour - are neither as abundant nor as cheap as they were when the tea plantations were established more than 100 years ago.
Tea is among the most labour-intensive of all the plantation crops. It has both an agricultural and a manufacturing dimension. According to well-established precepts, 60 percent of the income from tea is agricultural, the balance being of an industrial nature.
The
regional plantation companies (RPCs) say that the comparatively lower
productivity but higher labour costs, is creating a situation in which
the plantation sector is fast becoming financially unviable. PA says
labour productivity in Sri Lanka can and must improve substantially for
the industry’s survival. That is the present position. A deadlock. - See
more at:
http://www.dailymirror.lk/68755/plantation-wage-talks-in-deadlock#sthash.FIkgVHPt.dpuf
The
regional plantation companies (RPCs) say that the comparatively lower labour
productivity but higher labour costs, is creating a situation in which
the plantation sector is fast becoming financially unviable. For
the survival of Sri Lankan plantation industry its labour productivity must be improved substantially. Please read the article and
Read more (http://www.dailymirror.lk/68755/plantation-wage-talks-in-deadlock)
(http://www.dailynews.lk/?q=business/tea-crisis-planters-association-responds)
(http://www.dailymirror.lk/74135/tea-crisis-who-deceives-whom)
The
regional plantation companies (RPCs) say that the comparatively lower
productivity but higher labour costs, is creating a situation in which
the plantation sector is fast becoming financially unviable. PA says
labour productivity in Sri Lanka can and must improve substantially for
the industry’s survival. That is the present position. A deadlock. - See
more at:
http://www.dailymirror.lk/68755/plantation-wage-talks-in-deadlock#sthash.FIkgVHPt.dpuf
The
regional plantation companies (RPCs) say that the comparatively lower
productivity but higher labour costs, is creating a situation in which
the plantation sector is fast becoming financially unviable. PA says
labour productivity in Sri Lanka can and must improve substantially for
the industry’s survival. That is the present position. A deadlock. - See
more at:
http://www.dailymirror.lk/68755/plantation-wage-talks-in-deadlock#sthash.FIkgVHPt.dpuf
The
regional plantation companies (RPCs) say that the comparatively lower
productivity but higher labour costs, is creating a situation in which
the plantation sector is fast becoming financially unviable. PA says
labour productivity in Sri Lanka can and must improve substantially for
the industry’s survival. That is the present position. A deadlock. - See
more at:
http://www.dailymirror.lk/68755/plantation-wage-talks-in-deadlock#sthash.FIkgVHPt.dpuf