Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Minimum Salary Set to Rise by 8.1% to Rs40,000

Minimum Salary Set to Rise by 8.1% to Rs40,000

The Sindh Minimum Wages Board has suggested raising the minimum wage by Rs3,000 for different categories of workers across the province. The board sent a proposal to the provincial government recommending an 8.1% increase in the monthly minimum wage from Rs37,000 to Rs40,000. This proposed raise would cover unskilled adults, adolescents, semi-skilled, skilled, and highly … Read more

Sindh Govt issues minimum wage notification for workers  

Sindh
  • The minimum wage of workers will be Rs 32000 from July 1, 2023.
  • The notification states women workers will also get minimum wage.
  • A fixed minimum wage will be applied to skilled and unskilled workers.

KARACHI: The caretaker government of Sindh has issued a notification to fix the minimum wage of laborers and workers at Rs 32000 per month after the approval of the cabinet.

According to the notification, the minimum wage of workers will be Rs 32000 per month from July 1, 2023. The notification states that women workers will also get a minimum wage of Rs 32,000.

A fixed minimum wage will be applied to skilled and unskilled workers of all industries in the province.

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Court orders Sindh Govt to pay minimum wage to sanitary workers

Court orders
  • Sanitation workers being paid below the minimum wage.
  • Sanitation workers had to handle toxic pollutants during duty.
  • Sindh Govt must ensure complying with the labour laws.

KARACHI: Sindh High Court (SHC) directed the Sindh government to implement on minimum wage of Rs25,000 for sanitary workers deployed in all the departments across the province.

The direction came on a petition seeking the implementation of the minimum wage law for all the sanitation workers employed by the local government department and Sindh Solid Waste Management Board (SSWMB).

Naeem Sadiq and others had stated in their petition that sanitation workers employed by the local government bodies across the province were currently being paid well below the minimum wage.

They said that many sanitation workers employed by the union councils and the SSWMB, either directly or through a contractor, were not only paid well below the minimum wage but they also got no benefits whatsoever and could be fired at will.

They added that sanitation workers had to handle toxic pollutants, noxious substances, and hazardous biological and chemical agents in the course of their work, making them vulnerable to health risks, and they were also required to climb down sewerage drains, where they were immersed in waste and exposed to poisonous substances.

They said sanitation workers frequently died in the course of performing their duties due to the absences of protective gear and safety protocols, while they received no health care or compensation from their employers in case of injuries or death.

The petitioners called for invoking the Constitution’s articles 9 and 25 that required sanitation workers employed by government bodies across Sindh be entitled to at least the minimum legal wage, and said that sanitation workers had the right to livelihood and equality under the law.

The petitioners’ counsel, Sara Malkani, said sanitation workers were entitled to the minimum wage whether they were directly employed by the local government department or the SSWMB, or through contractors, and the government must ensure that the private contractors to whom it had outsourced sanitation services were complying with the labour laws.

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Turkey hikes minimum wage for second time this year

minimum wage
  • Turkey raises the minimum wage for the second time in a year on Friday.
  • The increase in net monthly take-home pay to 5,500 liras ($330).
  •  The Turkish currency has lost half its value against the dollar in the past 12 months.

 

Turkey raised the minimum wage for the second time in a year on Friday, hoping to cushion the blow of rising living costs ahead of next year’s general election.

The increase in net monthly take-home pay to 5,500 liras ($330) means that the nominal minimum wage has nearly doubled since last year’s end.

It stood at 2,826 liras in late December and 4,253 liras in January.

But with an official annual inflation rate of 73.5 percent — even higher in big cities such as Istanbul — the increase for the most part only compensates for an erosion in purchasing power already suffered by consumers.

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Germany passes 12-euro minimum wage measure

Germany

The one-third increase will affect 6.2 million people. A flagship policy in Olaf Scholz’s manifesto for elections last September. Hubertus Heil called the move a “matter of respect” for hard work. The German parliament passed legislation On Friday, raising the minimum hourly wage to 12 euros ($12.85), a key promise made by Chancellor Olaf Scholz … Read more

SHC questions provincial govt unilaterally fixing minimum wages

International labour day

KARACHI: The Sindh High Court observed on Thursday that it appeared that the provincial government had not taken into account the recommendations of Sindh Minimum Wages Board (SMWB) before raising the minimum wages for unskilled workers in Sindh from Rs17,500 to Rs25,000. The observation was made by Justice Salahuddin Panhwar of the two-member bench while … Read more