Excessive Leaves in Malaysia, Too Much Leisure to Employees Whilst Unbearable Burden to Employer?

This paper intends to portray the leaves benefit enjoyed by employees working in Malaysia, a comparison to neighbouring countries and a developed country including a best practice by Malaysian-leading company, whether Malaysia employees being overindulged with a lot of leisure rather than contributi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Razi, Zahratul Najihah
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30457/1/SOLAS%20VI_2022_76_82.pdf
_version_ 1825806187148345344
author Razi, Zahratul Najihah
author_facet Razi, Zahratul Najihah
author_sort Razi, Zahratul Najihah
collection UUM
description This paper intends to portray the leaves benefit enjoyed by employees working in Malaysia, a comparison to neighbouring countries and a developed country including a best practice by Malaysian-leading company, whether Malaysia employees being overindulged with a lot of leisure rather than contributing for the escalation of product and profit for the economic growth of a company's business, which resulted into a burden for employer for having had to allocate a large portion of money for providing employees with a paid-leisure. Neighbouring countries such as Singapore, Thailand and Brunei is being chosen for having a quite similar standing in Malaysia's socio-economic. While South Africa is being chosen because of the amendment of its' labour laws was made with the assistance of the South African's Commission and the Industrial Court and supported by /LO experts (/LO, Delivering excellent decent work results in Africa: Working Together for a better Africa, 2019) which put a high standard of the /LO Convention compliance. This paper also intent to portray the real working days compared to leaves in a calendar year, in comparison to other countries. At the end of this paper, it is concluded that employees shall be allowed to have a work-life balance (/LO, Decent Working Time: Balancing Worker's Needs with Business Requirements, 2007) in accordance with the /LO mission. Besides, the good practice of most government-link companies and leading companies in Malaysia indicates that providing employees with a good benefit does not in any way destruct the performance of the company in economic sector.
first_indexed 2024-07-04T06:45:31Z
format Conference or Workshop Item
id uum-30457
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
language English
last_indexed 2024-07-04T06:45:31Z
publishDate 2022
record_format eprints
spelling uum-304572024-02-27T14:56:20Z https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30457/ Excessive Leaves in Malaysia, Too Much Leisure to Employees Whilst Unbearable Burden to Employer? Razi, Zahratul Najihah K Law (General) This paper intends to portray the leaves benefit enjoyed by employees working in Malaysia, a comparison to neighbouring countries and a developed country including a best practice by Malaysian-leading company, whether Malaysia employees being overindulged with a lot of leisure rather than contributing for the escalation of product and profit for the economic growth of a company's business, which resulted into a burden for employer for having had to allocate a large portion of money for providing employees with a paid-leisure. Neighbouring countries such as Singapore, Thailand and Brunei is being chosen for having a quite similar standing in Malaysia's socio-economic. While South Africa is being chosen because of the amendment of its' labour laws was made with the assistance of the South African's Commission and the Industrial Court and supported by /LO experts (/LO, Delivering excellent decent work results in Africa: Working Together for a better Africa, 2019) which put a high standard of the /LO Convention compliance. This paper also intent to portray the real working days compared to leaves in a calendar year, in comparison to other countries. At the end of this paper, it is concluded that employees shall be allowed to have a work-life balance (/LO, Decent Working Time: Balancing Worker's Needs with Business Requirements, 2007) in accordance with the /LO mission. Besides, the good practice of most government-link companies and leading companies in Malaysia indicates that providing employees with a good benefit does not in any way destruct the performance of the company in economic sector. 2022 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30457/1/SOLAS%20VI_2022_76_82.pdf Razi, Zahratul Najihah (2022) Excessive Leaves in Malaysia, Too Much Leisure to Employees Whilst Unbearable Burden to Employer? In: Proceedings: Seminar on Law and Society 2022 (SOLAS VI) Theme: "Sustainability In Society: Legal Response", 8 & 9 November 2022, UUM Sintok, Kedah.
spellingShingle K Law (General)
Razi, Zahratul Najihah
Excessive Leaves in Malaysia, Too Much Leisure to Employees Whilst Unbearable Burden to Employer?
title Excessive Leaves in Malaysia, Too Much Leisure to Employees Whilst Unbearable Burden to Employer?
title_full Excessive Leaves in Malaysia, Too Much Leisure to Employees Whilst Unbearable Burden to Employer?
title_fullStr Excessive Leaves in Malaysia, Too Much Leisure to Employees Whilst Unbearable Burden to Employer?
title_full_unstemmed Excessive Leaves in Malaysia, Too Much Leisure to Employees Whilst Unbearable Burden to Employer?
title_short Excessive Leaves in Malaysia, Too Much Leisure to Employees Whilst Unbearable Burden to Employer?
title_sort excessive leaves in malaysia too much leisure to employees whilst unbearable burden to employer
topic K Law (General)
url https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30457/1/SOLAS%20VI_2022_76_82.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT razizahratulnajihah excessiveleavesinmalaysiatoomuchleisuretoemployeeswhilstunbearableburdentoemployer