What is constructive dismissal in Myanmar?
Constructive dismissal in Myanmar occurs when an employer's conduct forces the employee to resign — typical triggers are unilateral salary cuts, demotion, hostile work environment, forced transfer, or harassment. Under the Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 framework, the township labour office can reclassify the resignation as employer-initiated termination, triggering full notice and severance.
What Myanmar law says
While the Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 does not use the phrase "constructive dismissal" verbatim, the township labour office and Conciliation Body routinely treat resignations forced by employer conduct as termination without lawful grounds. The classic test: the employer's conduct made it unreasonable for the employee to continue, and the employee resigned in response. When the resignation is reclassified, the employer becomes liable for full notice, severance, leave encashment, and outstanding wages — the same package owed on direct employer termination.
Triggers that commonly count as constructive dismissal
- Unilateral salary reduction without written consent.
- Demotion or material change in duties without consent.
- Forced transfer to another city without contractual provision.
- Hostile work environment, bullying, or harassment.
- Withholding wages or benefits to pressure the employee out.
- Removing duties so the role becomes meaningless.
- Repeated public reprimands or undermining the employee.
What the township labour office looks at
| Factor | What it tests |
|---|---|
| Was the change unilateral? | Did the employer make the change without written consent? |
| Was it material? | Did it materially worsen pay, duties, or working conditions? |
| Did the employee object? | Did the employee raise the issue in writing before resigning? |
| Time between trigger and resignation | Quick resignation supports the employee's case |
| Is the conduct documented? | Emails, memos, meeting notes |
What if there's a dispute
- Township labour office first — the employee files within 6 months alleging the resignation was forced.
- Conciliation Body — formal conciliation under the Settlement of Labour Disputes Law.
- Arbitration Council — final binding step. Statute of limitations: typically 6 months.
Employer takeaway
Avoid unilateral changes that materially worsen pay, duties, or location. Get written consent before any salary reduction, demotion, or transfer. If a resignation comes after a contested change, expect the township labour office to reclassify and order full notice + severance + leave encashment. Run final settlement within 7 days of the agreed last working day, deregister from SSB within 30 days, and keep records for at least 7 years.
Edge cases and unenforceable clauses
- Performance management vs harassment — performance reviews are legitimate; targeted bullying is not.
- Salary cut for the whole company — must still be documented and consented to in writing.
- Transfer with reasonable notice — enforceable only if the transfer clause is in the original contract.
- See salary reduction without consent and termination without lawful grounds.
Common constructive-dismissal mistakes
- Cutting salary across the board without individual consent letters.
- Transferring an employee to a remote site without contractual provision.
- Stripping duties to push the employee to resign.
- Treating a forced resignation as "voluntary" and skipping severance.
- Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 — termination grounds
- Settlement of Labour Disputes Law — process and remedies
- Notification 84/2015 (or current) — notice and severance schedule
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