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Angola Remote Work and Minimum Wage - activpayroll

Written by activpayroll | Mar 23, 2022 12:00:00 AM

Angola’s government has implemented an increase to its national minimum wage and introduced remote work regulations.

In 2022, the government of Angola introduced new legislation to support many of its 16.2 million workers. The measures are intended to manage the rising cost of living in the country, and to support workers during the country’s recovery from Covid-19 restrictions.

National Minimum Wage Increase

In January 2022, Angola’s Council of Ministers approved a proposal to increase the country’s national minimum wage. Motivated by a desire to enhance the purchasing power of Angolan families still struggling to recover from Covid-19 restrictions, the proposal was agreed with input from the government and from Angolan trade unions. Authorised under Presidential Decree no. 54/22, the increase came into effect on 17th February, 2022, and represented a pay rise of around 50%.

Industrial sector

Minimum Wage

Commerce and extractive sectors

48,271.73 Akz

Transport, services and manufacturing sectors

40,226,44 Akz

Agricultural sectors (and economic activities not included in the previous categories)

32,181.15 Akz

Angolan Finance Minister Vera Daves stressed that the wage increase would be “sustainable over time”, but had been designed to offer the most benefit to “the people who earn less and who are the ones who suffer the most from the impact of inflation and… in acquiring what is most basic in satisfying their needs.”

Remote Work Regulation

Following restrictions introduced to cope with the Covid-19 pandemic, many Angolan employers were forced to introduce work from home schemes to continue operations. However, during the pandemic, Angola had no legislation to manage work from home rules, leaving many employees to take their own approaches.

On 17th February 2022, Presidential Decree 52/22 introduced the Remote Working Legal Framework. The decree introduced legal definitions for different types of remote work and rules for how arrangements should be made between employers and employees.

Under the decree, remote work is classified as:

  • Working from home: An employee working from their home.
  • Working from a satellite office: An employee working off-site from their employer’s main premises, or outside their own home.
  • Working in a community work centre: An employee working in a space shared by a number of organisations, contracted employees, or self-employed workers.
  • Nomadic working: An employee working from a non-fixed location.

Any adoption of remote work should be dependent on an agreement between employer and employee. The agreement may be proposed by either party and should be formalised in writing - with details including the employee’s duties, their remuneration, and their working hours.

The decree also sets out rules for employees that are entitled to remote work. These include:

  • Pregnant employees
  • Employees that care (jointly or individual) for children under 5
  • Employees that care for disabled dependents
  • Employees that cannot work at an employer’s premises for health reasons
  • A Constitutional State of Necessity that mandates remote work

Interested in doing business in Angola? Find out everything you need to know about payroll, tax, social security, employee benefits, work permits, employment law and more in activpayroll’s Guide to Doing Business in Angola. This is available as a free PDF to download.