What this looks like in practice
A multi-region Myanmar company — typical examples are retailers, microfinance institutions, telecom operators and logistics networks — runs a head office plus 5–200 branch sites across Yangon, Mandalay, Sagaing, Bago, Ayeyarwady and beyond. The labour stack (ESDL, SSB, PIT, Factories Act / S&E Act, OSH) applies uniformly. The challenge is keeping centralised compliance filings synced with decentralised daily operations.
Step-by-step setup
- Centralise PIT and SSB at head office under one DICA entity; consolidated monthly returns by the 15th.
- Register every branch at its township labour office; maintain a head-office master list.
- Standardise ESDL contracts with explicit transfer clauses for inter-region moves (Yangon ↔ Mandalay etc.).
- Decentralise daily roster, leave and discipline to regional/branch managers within the head-office HRMS.
- Apply regional salary brackets — Yangon, Mandalay, Naypyidaw and rural separate; do not flatten.
- Run weekly head-office HR audits on attendance, OT, leave and disciplinary actions per branch.
- Track cost centres in payroll for accurate branch P&L.
Tools, templates and costs
- Multi-branch HRMS with cost-centre, location tag and central rollups: MMK 1M–4M/month at 200–800 staff across 20+ branches.
- Central HR team: HR manager + 1–2 payroll specialists + ops officer = MMK 4M–7M/month.
- Per-staff cost: regional brackets — Yangon MMK 350,000–800,000, Mandalay MMK 250,000–600,000, rural MMK 200,000–500,000.
- Templates: branch labour-register entry, transfer policy, regional salary band table, branch-manager authority matrix.
Transfer policy is the contract risk
An employer cannot unilaterally transfer an employee from Yangon to Mandalay without contractual provision — under ESDL this is a material change requiring consent. Standard practice: include a transfer clause at hire (named regions, notice period for transfer, reasonable accommodation), then any inter-region move is contractually authorised. Without the clause, the employee can resign with constructive-dismissal grounds.
Employer takeaway
Multi-region Myanmar HR centralises PIT, SSB and contract templates at head office, decentralises attendance and discipline to branches, and applies regional salary brackets. Every branch needs a township labour register entry. Transfer clauses must be in the contract from hire. The single most-failed obligation is missing a township register entry when a new branch opens.
Pitfalls to avoid
- New branch without township labour register entry — common violation.
- Inter-region transfer without contract clause — ESDL violation grounds.
- Yangon salary bracket applied everywhere — over-pays and skews internal equity.
- Branch managers approving OT without head-office reconciliation — payroll-roster mismatch.
- Single cost-centre payroll — branch P&L is unknowable.
Related: retail chain HR, HR across cities, and budgeting HR costs.
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