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Ministry of Labor (Taiwan)

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Ministry of Labor
勞動部
Láodòng Bù (Mandarin)
Lô-tōng-pō͘(Taiwanese Hokkien)
Lò-thung Phu (Hakka)
Emblem of the Ministry of Labour
Ministry overview
Formed1 August 1987 (as Council of Labor Affairs)
17 February 2014 (as MOL)
JurisdictionGovernment of the Republic of China
HeadquartersZhongzheng District, Taipei
Ministers responsible
Websitemol.gov.tw

The Ministry of Labor (MOL; Chinese: 勞動部; pinyin: Láodòng Bù; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lô-tōng-pō͘) is a ministry of the Taiwanese Executive Yuan administering policies relating to employees and labor. The MOL works with various international organizations and engages in bilateral exchanges to elevate the welfare of laborers in Taiwan,[1] administering programs such as Labor Insurance.[2]

History[edit]

In 1947, before the implementation of Constitution of the Republic of China, the Nationalist government planned to establish the Ministry of Labor under the Executive Yuan. On 18 May 1948, the Ministry of Society (Chinese: 社會部) was founded by the Executive Yuan, and labor affairs were downgraded to an agency under the Ministry of Society. On 21 March 1949, the Ministry of Society was abolished, and labor affairs were then administered by the a newly founded Division of Labor under the Ministry of the Interior.

On 1 August 1987, the Council of Labor Affairs (Chinese: 勞工委員會; pinyin: Láogōng Wěiyuánhuì; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lô-kang Úi-ôan-hōe) was established as an independent agency under the Executive Yuan. The council was upgraded to Ministry of Labor Affairs on 17 February 2014.[3]

In July 1999, the Taiwan Province government was downsized, the Council of Labor Affairs labor take over the original duties from Department of Labor Affairs, Taiwan Provincial Government, and established the Central Office, Council of Labor Affairs, Executive Yuan. January 1, 2013, Council of Labor take over youngsters employment duties from National Youth Commission (Youth Employment Training Center). 2014, Central Office, Council of Labor Affairs reorganized into Skill Evaluation Center of Work Force Agency, Ministry of Labor.

The Taiwanese government had planned to upgrade labor affairs to ministry level. In 1990, the government of Lee Teng-hui amended the Organizational Act of the Executive Yuan. February 2009, government of Ma Ying-jeou amended the Organizational Act of the Executive Yuan, and make sure the Council of Labor will be upgraded to Ministry of Labor Affairs, sending the amended act to the Legislative Yuan.

January 29, 2014, Legislative Yuan pass the third reading of Organization Act of the Ministry of Labor, The Bureau of Labor Insurance, Ministry of Labor Organization Act, Organic Act of Workforce Development Agency, Ministry of Labor, Organization Act for the Bureau of Labor Funds of the Ministry of Labor, Organization Law of Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Ministry of Labor, Organic Act of Institute of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health, Ministry of Labor. February 17, Council of Labor Affairs, Executive Yuan is upgrade to "Ministry of Labor", still rent the part of the office spaces in Empire Garden Plaza for the ministry's administrative units. The other agencies like Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Workforce Development Agency are located in the Xinzhuang Joint Office Tower.

Lease space to own office space[edit]

From the start of the Ministry of Labor it was an independent government agency. It doesn't have its own office space, and needs to rent space from a third party. From 2001 to March 2018, the Council of Labor Affairs rented the office space in Empire Garden Plaza on No. 83, Section 2, Yanping North Road, Datong District, Taipei City.[4]

In June 2017, Ministry of Labor decided they will move to the "Building of Taiwan Cooperative Bank, Taiwan Province" (the old headquarter of Taiwan Cooperative Bank, No. 77, Guanqian Road, Zhongzheng District, Taipei City.).[5] In May 14, 2018, the headquarters of the Ministry of Labor officially moved into levels 4 to 14 of the Building of Taiwan Cooperative Bank, Taiwan Province, and started office hours. However, the Ministry of Labor still wanted to seek its own office spaces.[4][6]

June 1, 2020, the Ministry of Labor confirmed they got their own office space. The Veterans Affairs Commission published a press release, which said that after the dismissal of their own company, the RSEA Engineering Corporation, the company's office space in the 9 to 13 floor of Chi Ching Building, Songjian Road, Zhongzheng District, Taipei City, will be sold to the Ministry of Labor in 2021.[7] The Ministry of Labor plans to move into Chi Ching Building 2023, and will no longer prepare budget for rent lease.[8]

Visions[edit]

  • Autonomy
  • Equality
  • Development

Organization structures[edit]

Administrative Units[edit]

  • Department of General Planning
  • Department of Employment Relations
  • Department of Labor Insurance
  • Department of Employment Welfare and Retirement
  • Department of Labor Standards and Equal Employment
  • Department of Legal Services

Staff Units[edit]

  • Department of General Affairs
  • Department of Human Resources
  • Department of Civil Service Ethics
  • Department of Accounting
  • Department of Statistics
  • Department of Information Management

Agencies[edit]

List of ministers[edit]

Hsu Ming-chun, the incumbent Minister of Labor.

Political Party:   Kuomintang   Democratic Progressive Party   Non-partisan/ unknown

No. Name Term of Office Days Party Premier
Minister of the Council of Labor Affairs
1 Cheng Shuei-chih [zh] (鄭水枝) 1 August 1987 February 1989 Kuomintang Yu Kuo-hua
2 Chao Shou-po (趙守博) February 1989 1994 Kuomintang Yu Kuo-hua
Lee Huan
Hau Pei-tsun
Lien Chan
3 Hsieh Shen-shan (謝深山) 1994 May 1997 Kuomintang Lien Chan
4 Hsu Chieh-kuei (許介圭) May 1997 February 1998 Lien Chan
Vincent Siew
5 Chan Huo-shen (詹火生) February 1998 19 May 2000 Vincent Siew
6 Chen Chu (陳菊) 20 May 2000 19 September 2005 1948 Democratic Progressive Party Tang Fei
Chang Chun-hsiung I
Yu Shyi-kun
Frank Hsieh
7 Lee Ying-yuan (李應元) 19 September 2005 20 May 2007 608 Democratic Progressive Party Frank Hsieh
Su Tseng-chang I
8 Lu Tien-ling (盧天麟) 20 May 2007 19 May 2008 365 Democratic Progressive Party Chang Chun-hsiung II
9 Wang Ju-hsuan (王如玄) 20 May 2008 2 October 2012 1596 Independent Liu Chao-shiuan
Wu Den-yih
Sean Chen
10 Pan Shih-wei (潘世偉) 2 October 2012 16 February 2014 502 Kuomintang Sean Chen
Jiang Yi-huah
Minister of Labor (since 17 February 2014)
1 Pan Shih-wei (潘世偉) 17 February 2014 24 July 2014 157 Kuomintang Jiang Yi-huah
Hao Feng-ming (郝鳳鳴) 24 July 2014 20 August 2014 27 Jiang Yi-huah
2 Chen Hsiung-wen (陳雄文) 20 August 2014 19 May 2016 638 Jiang Yi-huah
Mao Chi-kuo
Chang San-cheng
3 Kuo Fang-yu (郭芳煜) 20 May 2016 7 February 2017 263 Lin Chuan
4 Lin Mei-chu (林美珠) 8 February 2017 26 February 2018 383 Lin Chuan
William Lai
5 Hsu Ming-chun (許銘春) 26 February 2018 20 May 2024 2275 Democratic Progressive Party William Lai
Su Tseng-chang II
Chen Chien-jen
6 Ho Pei-shan (何佩珊) 20 May 2024 Incumbent 49 Democratic Progressive Party Cho Jung-tai

Access[edit]

The MOL headquarters is accessible within walking distance from NTU Hospital metro station or Taipei Main Station of the Taipei Metro.

See also[edit]

References[edit]



(一)^ "Participation in international organizations". 26 January 2018.

(二)^ "Bureau of Labor Insurance Website".

(三)^ "Labor council head to run new labor ministry". Taipei Times. 2014-04-30. Retrieved 2014-05-07.

(四)^ ab (2018-05-09). "".  (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Taipei. Archived from the original on 2020-08-19. Retrieved 2018-06-27.

(五)^  (2017-07-10). " ". NOWnews . Archived from the original on 2018-06-25. Retrieved 2018-06-25.

(六)^  (2018-05-24). " ". . . Archived from the original on 2019-02-20. Retrieved 2018-06-25.

(七)^  (2020-06-01). "64" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). . Archived from the original on 2021-01-24. Retrieved 2021-01-06. 退80909131107退

(八)^  (2020-11-12). "112 ".  (in Chinese (Taiwan)). . Archived from the original on 2020-11-23. Retrieved 2021-02-08. 5800112

(九)^ Homepage About MOL Organization Structure (2014-02-13). "Organization Structure". English.mol.gov.tw. Retrieved 2014-05-07.

External links[edit]