Employee Relations Law in Uganda Work

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Employee relations law in Uganda

Introduction

Employee relations law depends on the legal link through reciprocal rights and obligations between
employers and employees. Oorganizations must furnish effort to create and maintain a positive
relationship with its employees to keep them loyal and more engaged in their work. However, the main
ways through which workers benefit the access into the rights and advantages related with employment
is in the areas of labor law and social security. The existence of an employment relationship is the
condition that determines the application of the labor and social security law provisions addressed to
employees.

Farnham (1993), suggests that Employee relation are:

“ Concerned with the interaction between primary parties who pay for work and those
who provide it in the labour market ( employers and employees), those acting as
secondary parties on their behalf (management or management organization and trade
unions) and those providing a third party role on employment matters (state agencies
and EU institutions)”

Objective of employee relations law

Set up legislation that establishes responsibilities and rights in employment, particularly the
responsibilities of the employer and the rights of the employee.

Elements of employee relations law

- Leadership
- Communication
- Culture
- Rewards and recognition
- Professional and personal growth
- Accountability and performance
- Vision and values
- Corporate social responsibility

Advantage of employee relations


Happier employees feels that they have a personal connection with their employers, which means that
they are likely to stay in the organizations longer. A major benefit of cultivating a meaningful and strong
employee – employer relationship is that employees learn to trust you and you learn to trust them.

Employee relations law in Uganda

In Uganda, the employee relations is defined by the components of labor law of 2019.

Below are some of components of Ugandan labor law:

- Employee contract
- Duties during employment
- Social security

1. EMPLOYEE CONTRACTS

The key point of reference for determining the nature and extent of employers' rights and obligations is
through contract. Employee contracts attribute rights and responsibilities between parties to a bargain
and are made between the employer and the employee. It is governed by contractual principles such as
offer, acceptance, consideration and legality. Rights and duties are superimposed on these contractual
arrangements and employers cannot derogate from these rights or duties even by contract. The parties
agree to the terms and conditions provided they are not less than what the Act provides or exclude the
application of a provision of the Act to the detriment of the employee, where permitted by the Act.
[S.27].

Under the Ugandan Employment Act, 2006, the contract should contains the following components:

- The parties to the contract of employment;


- The date of commencement of work ;
- Whether the contract is valid for the present or fixed-term; A contract of employment that is valid
for the present is the principal rule. This means that work will continue until the employee resigns or
the employer dismisses the employee. A fixed-term work contract means that the time of
commencement and ending of work have been agreed upon.
- Probationary period and its duration A probationary period can be agreed upon at the beginning of
the contract of employment. However, this can as well depend on the organisation’s human
resource policies.
- Place of work – This is normally the principle physical address of the employer;
- Duties – These are usually specified in the job description;
- Remuneration and its method of payment Remuneration is determined according to the collective
agreement. If there is no collective agreement in the sector of work, employees are entitled to
reasonable remuneration. An employer must not pay remuneration that is less than stipulated in the
collective agreement. Remuneration can contain various bonuses and such bonuses may include
experience bonus, overtime pay and extra compensation for shift work among others. Any changes
in an individual’s salary should be notified to him/her in writing. Payroll and Salary Payments
Procedures An organisation may employ both permanent and contract employees. It is advisable to
pay their salaries on approved payroll once every end of the month to respective account numbers
in any. The Amount of remuneration should be as defined in the formal letter of appointment or
contract documents net of all statutory deductions
- Working hours The contract must specify regular working hours. Working hours must comply with
the Employment Act.
- Annual holidays and pay An employee is required to work for an employer for not more than six
consecutive days with a day’s rest, taken on any day which is customary or agreed between the
parties. The maximum number of hours per week is 48.
An employee is entitled once in every calendar year, to a holiday with full pay at the rate of seven
days in respect of each period of a continuous four months’ service or 21 days a year, to be taken at
such time during such calendar year as may be agreed between the parties. Annual leave applies
only to employees who have performed continuous service for their employer for a minimum period
of six months or has been working under a contract of service for sixteen hours a week or more. A
female employee shall, as a consequence of pregnancy, have the right to a period of sixty working
days leave from work on full wages. When an employee’s contract is terminated he or she is entitled
to receive a holiday with pay proportionate to the length of service for which he or she has not
received such a holiday, or compensation in lieu of the holiday. An employee who has completed
not less than one month’s continuous service with an employer and who is incapable of work
because of sickness or injury is entitled to sick pay, however, he or she should notify or cause to be
notified as soon as is reasonably practicable, his or her employer of his or her absence and the
reason for it; and produce, if requested by his or her employer a written certificate signed by a
qualified medical practitioner certifying his or her incapacity for work and duration of the incapacity.
A male employee immediately after the delivery or miscarriage of his declared wife has the right to a
period of four working days’ leave from work annually.
- Overtime payments Depending on the structure of the organization, the issue of overtime can apply
to only junior and clerical staff or as management may consider appropriate. • Days worked on
public holidays can be compensated. • In the cases where, due to nature of the employee’s work, an
employee is required to work on his/her day-off, the employee can be compensated by taking a day
off some other time.
- the terms or conditions relating to incapacity for work due to sickness or injury, including any
provision for sick pay
- Period of notice A contract of employment that is valid for the present expires after either the
employee’s or employer’s period of notice. The period of notice signifies the time for the duration of
which an employee is obliged to work before the notice date. During the period of notice, all the
normal employees’ rights and obligations apply to the employee.

2. DUTIES DURING EMPLOYMENT

According to the legislation as described in Uganda’s Employment, the basic duties that the employee
(er) are below:

- The Employer Obligation to Provide Work Generally, while the employee is contractually obliged to
attend at the work place during the agreed times for working, the employer is not obliged to furnish
actual work to be done. All that usually is required of the employer is to pay the agreed
remuneration for the period during which the employee is at work. Although having no actual work
to do may deprive the employee of job satisfaction is always regrettable but by itself provide no
cause of action. In Cresswell Vs. Sawdon & Co. 5,
- The Employee Loyalty and good faith The employee must not accept bribes or make secret profits.
Misconduct The employee must not misconduct himself. The term misconduct includes persistent
laziness, immorality, dishonesty; drunkenness etc. misconduct will justify summary dismissal if it
goes to the root of the contract.
- Trade secrecy : The employee must maintain secrecy over his employer’s affairs during the time of
his employment. If the employer wishes to extend this beyond the period of employment, it would
be advisable to insert a suitable clause in the contract of employment (restraint of trade clause). The
employee is under an obligation to his employers not to disclose confidential information obtained
by him in the course of, and as a result of his employment. The duty applies both during
employment and afterwards if the employee seeks to use such information to the detriment of his
employer.

Competence and Care

An employee must be reasonably competent to perform the job for which he was hired. Extreme
incompetence will warrant instant dismissal; it was been held in Harmer Vs Cornelius 10 to be : Many
employments have elaborate disciplinary procedures aimed at ensuring that the work is done with a
reasonable degree of competence.

Indemnity

Since it is an implied term of the employment contract that employees will exercise a reasonable
degree of care and skill in the performance of their work, consequently, it was held in Lister Vs Ramford
Ice cold storage Co. Ltd 11, Court held;

Obedience to reasonable orders

Generally, employers are not entitled to give orders regarding what employees do outside their working
hours but there are some jobs which warrant giving certain instructions about what an employee should
or should not do while not actually at work, orders regarding what an employee should do outside work
will usually be regarded as unreasonable, unless the contract clearly envisaged giving those orders his
contract, he could be posted abroad to any branch in Turkey.

Even where a contract expressly authorizes the employer to give certain directions, ordinarily, those
must still take due account of the employee’s health and safety, In Johnstone Vs Bloomesbury Health
Authority

Co-operation

Over and above the question of obeying specific orders, employees are subject to an overriding duty to
co-operate with their employers in the performance of their work. Because the employment contract
envisages a continuing relationship between employers and employees, it would seem that the
employee must perform the various contractual obligations with a degree of good faith. It is an implied
term that the contract should be performed in such a way as not to undermine its commercial objective
3. SOCIAL SECURITY

This is regarded as the principle or practice or a program of public provision (as through social insurance
or assistance) for the economic security and social welfare of the individual employee and his or her
family. Organisations can as well have in-house social security programmes for their employees. The
main purpose is retirement planning. The NSSF Act allows any employee of or above the age of sixteen
and below the age of fifty-five years as eligible for registration and membership to the Fund. Subject to
any prescribed terms and conditions, the employer may apply for voluntary registration as a
contributing employer; and any eligible employee of such employer may thereafter apply for voluntary
registration as a member of the fund. Under the NSSF Act S. 12, every contributing employer is required
for every month during which he or she pays wages to an eligible employee to pay to the fund, within
fifteen days next following the last day of the month for which the relevant wages are paid, a standard
contribution of 15 percent calculated on the total wages paid during that month to that employee.
Under S. 116 of the Income Tax Act, every employer shall withhold tax from a payment of employment
income to an employee. If an eligible employee is employed successively or concurrently by two or more
employers, each of such employers shall pay to the fund in respect of such employee a contribution
corresponding to the wages he or she pays to such eligible employee. An employer is required to furnish
to the managing director on an approved form particulars regarding each eligible employee in his or her
service, his or her wages, the contribution due on such wages, the total wages. The managing director
may grant a certificate of exemption to employers who engage the following employees: a. Persons not
ordinarily resident in Uganda but liable to contribute to or are or will be entitled to benefit from the
social security scheme of another country, if that scheme is approved by the Minister. b. Persons not
ordinarily resident in Uganda who are liable to contribute to or are or will be entitled to benefit from
any scheme associated with their employment under which benefits comparable to the benefits under
the NSSF Act, are provided, if that scheme is approved by the Minister.

Of late a new initiative of Voluntary Membership which provides employers and workers that are not
compelled by the mandatory provisions of the NSSF Act the opportunity to voluntarily save for their
retirement has been launched. This is open to employers with less than 5 employees and individuals
who are former NSSF members, whom the Fund already paid their respective benefits, but are still able
and willing to save with the Fund.

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