How do I manage HR for a retail chain in Myanmar?
A Myanmar retail chain runs under the Shops & Establishments Act across multiple stores, with shift work, weekend and public-holiday OT, and a centralised payroll. Each store needs its own attendance register, township labour register entry and store-level SSB count. Centralise PIT and SSB monthly, decentralise daily attendance and roster. Cloud HRMS is essential past 50 total staff.
What this looks like in practice
A Myanmar retail chain — supermarket, convenience, fashion or electronics — typically runs 5–50 stores per region. The Shops & Establishments Act governs hours and rest. Each store has its own attendance register and entry on the township labour register, but PIT and SSB filings are usually centralised under the head-office DICA entity. Multi-region operations introduce travel allowance, transfer policies and store-manager discretion as compliance risks.
Step-by-step setup
- Register every store at its township labour office; maintain a central master list.
- Centralise ESDL appointment letters from head office; standardise probation, notice and severance per Notification 84/2015.
- Run cloud payroll centrally for all stores with PIT and SSB consolidated — but keep cost-centre tagging by store.
- Decentralise daily rosters to store managers using a shared HRMS; head-office HR audits weekly.
- File monthly — PIT remitted by the 15th, SSB return by the 15th, head-office consolidated.
- OSH committee per location if any store crosses 50 employees; central OSH manual everywhere.
- Standardise transfer policy in the contract — transfers between Yangon and Mandalay need contractual provision.
Tools, templates and costs
- Multi-store HRMS with cost-centre rollups: MMK 800,000–2,500,000/month for 100–500 staff.
- Central HR team: HR manager + payroll specialist + ops officer = MMK 3M–5M/month.
- Per-staff cost: MMK 350,000–700,000/month Yangon, MMK 250,000–500,000 Mandalay.
- Templates: store-roster, transfer policy, store-manager authority matrix, multi-store SSB register.
Region notes — Yangon, Mandalay, Naypyidaw
Yangon stores in malls (Junction City, Myanmar Plaza) often have mall-level operating hours that exceed the 44-hour personal cap; rotate staff to keep individuals within the limit. Mandalay store rentals are 30–50% lower but local salary brackets correspondingly lower. Naypyidaw stores see government-day demand spikes and lower weekend traffic — roster accordingly.
Employer takeaway
Centralise PIT and SSB filings at head office; decentralise rosters to store managers under a shared HRMS. Each store needs its own township labour register entry. Standardise transfer policy in the contract. Records: 7 years for payroll across all stores. The single most-failed obligation is missing the township register at new stores.
Pitfalls to avoid
- New store opened without township register entry — standard violation across new openings.
- Store managers approving OT without head-office reconciliation — payroll-vs-roster mismatch.
- Inter-city transfers without contractual provision — ESDL violation; can be challenged.
- Skipping SSB at new stores under 5 — works only if no other entity stores share the same SSB number.
- Single payslip across multiple stores — cost-centre tagging required for accurate reporting.
Related: multi-region HR, running payroll, and HR across cities.
- Shops & Establishments Act — 44-hour week, OT, weekly rest
- Social Security Law 2012 — registration thresholds
- ESDL 2013 — appointment letters, notice and severance
- Payment of Wages Law — payslip and pay-cycle
Related questions
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