Wednesday, March 18, 2015

NCR starts round of floor wage hike



THE NATIONAL Capital Region (NCR) has kicked off a fresh round of raise for private sector minimum wage earners nationwide, with those in Metro Manila getting P15 more starting next month on top of current pay, the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) announced yesterday.

Business leaders yesterday were cautious towards the development, citing the need to preserve whatever edge the country still has over its peers in attracting investors, while a spokesman of the country’s biggest labor group described the approved amount as “revolting” as it widens the gap between the rich and the poor.

And while the country’s capital typically leads other regions in raising daily minimum wage, a ranking central bank official said the latest round should not stoke inflation beyond expectations and, hence, will not in itself warrant a change in monetary policy.

A DoLE statement yesterday said Alex V. Avila, chairman of NCR’s Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board (RTWPB), had reported to Labor and Employment Secretary Rosalinda D. Baldoz that “RTWPB-NCR has approved a resolution granting a P15 increase in the daily basic minimum wage and continuing a P15 Cost of Living Allowance (CoLA) in effect since January 2014.”

The latest raise will bring minimum wage in Metro Manila to P444 for workers in the agricultural sector and to P481 for those in non-agriculture businesses.

The order mandating the latest increase will take effect some time next month, 15 days after publication, Mr. Avila said, adding that the National Wages and Productivity Commission is expected to affirm the decision this week. It is the fifth wage hike since the Aquino administration took office.

“The decision of the RTWPB-NCR to adjust the minimum wage was consistent with the government’s policy of granting regular, moderate, and predictable minimum wage adjustments, taking into consideration the needs of workers and their families, as well as the need to maintain stability in the business environment...” Mr. Avila said in the DoLE statement.

Metro Manila’s daily minimum wage was last adjusted in an order of the regional board that took effect on Oct. 4, 2013, involving a P10 increase. Other regions followed suit.

This year’s pay increase will directly benefit 587,000 workers, Mr. Avila added, clarifying that the wage order applies to minimum wage earners only.

But while DoLE estimates that the new order will raise employers’ “effective labor cost per employee working six days a week by 3.2%,” a group of personnel managers said cost will necessarily rise across employee segments.

“Setting minimum wages is actually not a good idea... It creates undue pressure and sets a bad precedent,” Noel D. Baliscas of the People Management Association of the Philippines said by phone, explaining it pushes employers to adjust other salaries “to maintain seniority in terms of nature of work or years of service.”

“Distressed” establishments, retail and other service businesses regularly employing up to 10 workers, and those affected by natural calamities may apply for exemption for a year from coverage of the new wage order.

DoLE said in its statement that the latest decision “took into through consideration several factors, including erosion in minimum wage; inflation rate; possible impact of the minimum wage adjustment on prices of goods and services as well as on employment... the current economic condition in the region; employers’ ability to pay; and results of continuing studies, sectoral consultations and public hearings.”

Mr. Avila said that the latest increase brings minimum wage-average wage ratio to 75%, close to an “ideal” level of 40-70%, down from 80% when the current administration took office in mid-2010. “The applicable minimum wage-average wage ratio for the country is not too close to allow for bipartite approaches and flexibility in plant level negotiations for further benefits,” he said.

The increase stemmed from two petitions: one by the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP)-Nagkaisa faction that sought a P136 across-the-board increase, and another by the Association of Minimum Wage Earners and Advocates that asked for a P734 increase to be implemented in equal tranches of P146.80 each for five straight years. Both groups cited rising utility costs and higher Metro Manila railway fares.

Vicente R. Leogardo, Jr., who represents the Employers Confederation of the Philippines in NCR’s wage board, said the P15 increase strikes a balance between employer and worker interests.

“What I can say... as employer representative in the wage board is that the increase was tied to the erosion of P19.11 as of February,” Mr. Leogardo said in a text message. “We consider the increase as fair and equitable to both labor and employers under prevailing circumstances.”

Another business group said the government should do away with yearly wage increases to keep the country’s edge in terms of labor costs over its peers.

“That would be an additional burden, considering the ASEAN Economic Community is coming up,” Alfredo M. Yao, president of the Philippine Chamber of Commerce, Inc., said in a phone interview, referring to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

“After this, salary increases should not be yearly, nor legislated (which would be across the board, not just for minimum wage). As things stand, our salaries are already somewhat higher than those of our neighbors.”

But TUCP-Nagkaisa Spokesperson Alan A. Tanjusay described the increase as “unacceptable.”

“This amount is revolting. Rather than closing the gap between rich and poor, government officials in the board have further widened the gaping inequality among Filipinos -- between a few elite and a famished majority who live to survive by the day,” Mr. Tanjusay said in a statement sent shortly after the wage board’s announcement.

“We dare DoLE, DTI, and NEDA to show the formula they used as basis for the new wage order and subject it to healthy discussion rather than allow their silence to create a conclusion that the amount was taken out of thin air,” he added, referring to the Department of Trade and Industry and the National Economic and Development Authority.

ANTICIPATED
Metro Manila’s approved increase in floor wage is not expected to stoke inflation and nor, by itself, alter the neutral stance of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) on monetary policy, a senior central bank official said yesterday.

“We have already anticipated that (wage hike) and incorporated its impact on our latest forecasts,” BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said in a text message.

The BSP expects the rise in prices of widely used goods to settle within 2-4% this year and next, with average forecasts of 2.3% in 2015 and 2.5% in 2016.

Asked if the pay raise will affect the neutral stance of the Monetary Board when it meets on March 26, the BSP official replied: “It would have if it is not anticipated and not considered in the forecast. So whatever monetary policy stance the board will decide on would have already considered its impact on future inflation.” -- By Melissa Luz T. Lopez, Reporter with Daryll Edisonn D. Saclag BusinessWorld

Palace on P15-wage hike: It’s good still

MalacaƱang Palace

MANILA, Philippines – The P15-wage hike in Metro Manila may be measly for some, but it is still additional pay, MalacaƱang said Wednesday.

“Some will call it not enough or not sufficient but it’s still something to be given—something in addition to what they are already getting,” Deputy Presidential Spokesperson Abigail Valte said in a press briefing.

Valte said the wage increase, which will be implemented in April, is a product of a compromise between the requests of labor groups and employers.

“That brings the total wage in NCR to P481 (for non-agricultural workers), if I am not mistaken, and it’s good still,” she said. Meanwhile, minimum wage earners working in the agricultural sector will receive P444 per day.

She said it was a given that labor groups and employers will never agree or be on the same level when it comes to the issue of wage hike.

“The job of the Wage Board is to determine what can be given that will also not be detrimental to employers. Meaning, if you give too high—this is one of the considerations of Wage Board and they tell you as much—that if you give too high an increase, the employers will not be able to absorb it,” she explained.

But labor groups said the amount was “insulting.”

“The P15.00 increase in workers’ daily wage is not even enough to cover for the increase in fares in the country’s train systems. It’s not enough to cover for the rising prices of basic commodities, especially food items, and rising payments for basic services,” Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) chairperson Elmer “Bong” Labog said, citing Ibon Foundation’s computation of the family living wage.

Based on 2014 prices, Ibon said an average Filipino family needs at least P1,086 to live decently.

Labog said the minimum wage is no longer enough to cover the needs of Filipinos and that they are now campaigning for a “national minimum wage” of P16,000 per month.

The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP), on the other hand, called it “unacceptable.”

“Rather than closing the gap between rich and poor, government officials in the (wage) Board has further widened the gaping inequality amongst Filipinos,” TUCP spokesperson Alan Tanjusay said.

Tanjusay said the concerned agencies should reveal to the public the formula they used to come up with the P15-wage hike. - Kristine Angeli Sabillo @KSabilloINQ INQUIRER.net


Labor groups slam ‘insulting’ P15 NCR minimum wage hike

MANILA, Philippines—Insulting and disrespectful.

That was how workers’ groups on Wednesday described the P15 increase in the minimum wage in the National Capital Region (NCR) approved by the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board last Tuesday.

In separate statements, Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) and Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) hit the minimal increment in the minimum wage as too meager for a family to live decently.

“The P15.00 increase in workers’ daily wage is not even enough to cover for the increase in fares in the country’s train systems. It’s not enough to cover for the rising prices of basic commodities, especially food items, and rising payments for basic services,” KMU Chairperson Elmer Labog said.

Labog explained the new NCR minimum wage: P481 for workers in the non-agriculture sector and P444 for workers in the agriculture sector, is too small compared to the P1,086 daily average needed to provide a decent living for families as revealed by Ibon Foundation.

In response to the wage hike, KMU will organize protests to demand President Benigno Aquino III’s resignation.

Meanwhile, TUCP spokesperson Alan Tanjusay said the “revolting” wage hike further deepened the divide between the rich and the poor.

“This amount is revolting. Rather than closing the gap between rich and poor, government officials in the Board has further widened the gaping inequality amongst Filipinos—between a few elite and a famished majority who live to survive by the day,” Tanjusay said.

The wage hike will take effect in April and is said to benefit 587,000 minimum wage earners in the metropolis. - Aries Joseph Hegina INQUIRER.net

P15 minimum wage hike for Metro Manila workers approved

Starting April 15, the region's minimum wage for workers in the non-agricultural sector is now at P481, and in the agricultural sector at P444 MANILA, Philippines (UPDATED) – A wage hike of P15 for Metro Manila's minimum wage earners was approved by the regional wage board.

Starting April 15, the region's workers in the non-agricultural sector will receive a minimum wage of P481, while workers in the agricultural sector will have a minimum wage of P444.

Department of Labor and Employment communications director Nicon Fameronag announced the news on Wednesday, March 18, at the DOLE office in Manila.

The hike is set to benefit 587,000 workers, said Labor Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz, who also chairs the National Wages and Productivity Commission.

For workers who receive their salaries twice a month every 15 days, the increase will reflect in their April 30 pay slips.

The Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board-National Capital Region (RTWPB-NCR) approved the resolution on the P15 increase, which is on top of the P15 Cost of Living Allowance in effect since January 2014.

DOLE NCR Director Alex Avila explained that the hike is consistent with government policy that takes into account workers' and their families' needs, as well as business stability.

“The take-home pay of our minimum wage earners will increase to P492.57 per day, or by 3.2%, because of the wage hike, compared to the current P477.03 per day. They will also enjoy a higher 13th month pay and increased social security coverage,” Avila said.

A workers' take-home pay includes the amount he will get from the law-mandated 13th month pay.

Avila explained that minimum wage earners are exempt from paying income tax on their wage. No taxes are imposed on their hazard pay, holiday pay, night shift differential, and overtime pay either.

He added that NCR businesses will be able to bear the cost and still sustain employment creation.

The P15 increase is the 5th wage since President Benigno Aquino III took office in 2010.

Calls for across-the-board increase

In a phone interview with Rappler, Fameronag explained that two wage hike petitions were filed before the RTWPB-NCR, asking for an across-the-board wage increase.

This, however, is not within the regional wage board's mandate.

"Unfortunately, the RTWPB is not mandated to set across-the-board wage increases. Our mandate is to set minimum wages," the board said in a resolution.

The board asked petitioners to conform with standards prescribed by law in petitions that will be filed in the future.

Trade Union Congress of the Philippines-Nagkaisa's Alan Tanjusay, however, asked the regional wage board to "show the formula they used as basis for the new wage order and subject it to healthy discussion."

"They better explain it to the workers immediately or else their lack of credibility may invite confusion, if not incite chaos, particularly among poor workers," he said, calling the P15 increase "revolting."

TUCP was among the petitioners before the RTWPB.

On the other hand, Kilusang Mayo Uno chair Elmer Labog said such "region-based wage hikes don’t address the attacks carried out against the minimum wage in the country for decades."

"We are fighting for the implementation of a National Minimum Wage in the amount of P16,000 monthly to give workers some immediate relief and to turn back the attacks against the minimum wage throughout the country,” Labog said.

He added that the wage hike is insufficient, considering increases in the prices of basic commodities and the fare hike in Metro Manila trains.

'Let market forces decide'

Reacting to the wage hike, lawyer Noel Balsicas of the People Management Association of the Philippines said the mandated minimum wage is an outmoded means of wage determination.

"This will have an effect on other personnel who are not directly affected by the increase through wage compression or wage distortion," he said.

Employers are now forced to increase the salary of a worker with a typically higher rate than a minimum wage earner to "restore the seniority of that individual."

Balsicas said it is better to let market forces decide salary increases instead of the government mandating them.

"It also backfires in a way to the workers," he added, explaining that manufacturers are now forced to increase the price of their products and services to sustain the higher salaries of their workers.

This creates an "additional pressure on the cost of living," he said, calling it a "chicken-and-egg situation."

Around 40% of manufacturing cost is labor, he added. – Rappler.com Buena Bernal