Monday, January 7, 2019

Labor group calls on Duterte to abolish all wage boards

https://www.kilusan.org/2019/01/labor-group-calls-on-duterte-to-abolish.html
Business World file photo

The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) is urging President Duterte to abolish all wage boards in the country and replace it with a singular wage-fixing body that will determine a uniform minimum wage rate nationwide.

TUCP President Raymond Mendoza also said there is now an “urgent need” for the President to begin the process of abolishing the differentiated provincial rates by overhauling the 30-year-old current wage setting structure because “the current minimum wage setting mechanism only favors those businesses and no longer balances the interest of workers.”

“The wage board is key in achieving equality and social justice for workers. Its mandate is to ensure that our economic growth also benefits the workers. However, our economy is growing and business enterprises have been prospering but the workers who helped built that wealth remains impoverished,” Mendoza said in a statement on Sunday.

The 17 wage boards across the country were created in 1989 through Republic Act 6727 also known as Wage Rationalization Act. Its mandate is to set minimum wage that protects workers’ welfare and promote enterprise and workers productivity.

Despite the wage increase orders issued last year, workers’ minimum wages across all sectors nationwide still failed to reach even half of the P1,400 daily standard amount set by the National Economic and Development Authority for a family of five to live a comfortable life, the group said.

According to TUCP, the average minimum wage was raised to P374 a day by the end of 2018, from P340 during the first quarter of the same year.

The TUCP even noted that Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III admitted last week that the Metro Manila wage board should have granted a P100 daily wage hike to enable workers cope with rising inflation rather than a mere P25 daily wage increase on its wage order issued on November last year.

“We have reached a point where even the secretary of labor openly admitted the discrepancy. This is an affirmation of the TUCP observation that wage boards have become obsolete and irrelevant to equate in the balance of labor and capital the interest of workers in these generation where there are no more boundaries,” Mendoza said.

Also, before the abolition of wage boards, the group noted that there should be a review of the wage increase orders issued last year.

“Before overhauling the wage fixing mechanism, President Duterte must order all 17 regional wage boards across the country to immediately review and adjust their issued wage orders to a uniform daily P100 wage hike as stated by Secretary Bello as the amount the board should have granted to lift workers out of poverty,” Mendoza said. - Bernadette D. Nicolas

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