Work and Wages

This page was last updated on: 2023-05-01

Minimum Wage

The Constitution states that the State will set national standards regarding limiting the duration of work and shall create conditions for establishing a national minimum wage for various occupations.

The process for determining the minimum wage has been established neither by law nor by collective agreements. The Country’s first national minimum wage set by the Cape Verde’s Commission for Social Dialogue and came into force on 1st January 2014. It did amount to 11,000 escudos for public sector workers and 12,000 for entry level-workers.

Compliance with minimum wage regulations along with other Labour Code provisions is the responsibility of the General Labour Inspectorate which works directly under the Ministry of Labour. Labour Inspectors have the right to impose fines.

Source: Article 60 of The Constitution of Cape Verde 1980; §394-397 of the Labour Code 2007

Regular Pay

Wages means “basic remuneration and all other regular and periodic benefits provided, directly or indirectly, in cash or in kind, to the worker as counterpart to the work.”

Remuneration is due for determined and equal periods, which cannot exceed 31 days and must be paid on the last working day of the reference period. Except for collective agreement or employer’s regulation to which the worker agrees, remuneration should always be paid in national currency. Whenever part of remuneration is done in kind, this portion cannot be bigger than the part paid in cash, except if the opposite is established in a collective agreement. Remuneration must be paid at the place of work. It is forbidden to perform the payment of remuneration in premises dedicated to gambling and the sale of liquor, except for the workers of these businesses.

The parties may agree on other forms of remuneration aimed at increasing production and productivity, enhancing the quality of the products and promoting better uses and conservation of the employer’s assets.

The employer cannot make deductions from the wage except for those established by law for the funding of the social security; deductions determined by a final decision of the court; compensation payable by the employee to the employer because of damage caused by him/her to the company which is determined by the court; fines imposed as a disciplinary sanction; meal price at the workplace, the use of telephones, supplies or services of the company that the employee expressly requests; and the allowances or advances provided because of the written document signed by the worker. However, all these deductions (fines imposed, compensation for damages and deductions set by the decision of a court) except for those set by law cannot exceed one third (33%) of the employees’ wages.

Source: §199-203 of the Labour Code 2007

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