Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Labor group hits ECOP for dictating ‘measly’ P20 wage increase

Rappler photo

The labor group Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines slammed the Employers’ Confederation of the Philippines for dictating a measly P20 wage increase for minimum workers in the National Capital Region during the public hearing on wage increase.

ALU-TUCP spokesperson Alan Tanjusay said the P20 wage increase is being floated by the ECOP as the amount they want the Metro Manila wage board to grant as acceptable to them.

The labor group has filed a P334 wage increase in Metro Manila to be hiked by P334 to reach P846 from the current P512.

The ALU-TUCP cited inflation as the main reason for the proposed hike which rose to 6.2 percent.

Tanjusay said that prices of food and costs of services continue to rise since June, saying there is a need for workers and their families to cope with the current 6.2-percent inflation rate.

Last September, the Department of Labor and Employment announced a P20 hike in the minimum wage in Metro Manila, but the labor group said that proposed hike was an insult to the 4 million wage earners in Metro Manila.

“Considering the searing extraordinary hardship caused by incredibly growing inflation among lowly-waged minimum-waged workers and their families, the ECOP statement is inciting upheaval among workers mostly in slum areas who helped build business and country economy grow but are being treated unjustly,” Tanjusay said.

He said that poor workers are already suffering from government neglect, as the labor group urged business and employers to stop from making highly provocative statements like that.

“We saw and felt once again, how greedy and irresponsible employers and business groups are by continuing to absolutely oppose any wage hike proposal and by defending their profit margin at all costs without due regard to the suffering of their employees particularly at these economically hard times for workers and their families,” the labor group said.

“We can only hope for the best. But with these kinds of poor value and low character shown today by business and employers, let us be ready for the worse,”Tanjusay added. - by Vito Barcelo

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Substantial wage hike unlikely, labor admits


LABOR groups sought President Rodrigo Duterte’s intervention for a “substantial” wage increase for some 4 million wage earners in Metro Manila, after a consultation on Monday with the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board-National Capital Region (RTWPB-NCR).

Representatives of the Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (ALU-TUCP) submitted during the meeting a supplementary position paper amending its original P320 daily wage hike petition filed in June 2018 to P334 a day.

ALU-TUCP Vice President Louie Corral admitted that the petition for a substantial wage increase was unlikely to be granted, saying that “the NCR regional wage boards were just being polite, perfunctory and routine and just wanted to get over it.”

“It looks like the NCR wage board is not sure about its full mandate. These are times of economic hardship and difficulty for workers in a supposedly growing economy. We fear that what we encountered today are wage board members who don’t want to take real responsibility and make the hard decisions for fairness and decency,” Corral said.

Amid rising prices of goods and cost of services, the President should intervene in the wage issue, he said, adding it might be mishandled and result in a backlash against the Duterte government.

“We therefore call on the President to lead from the front on the wage petition issue. Workers are already barely surviving on their daily minimum wages,” Corral said.

Corral claimed that economic managers were pre-empting the wage board deliberations and misleading the President by saying that a substantial wage increase would be inflationary.

Inflation, however, was caused by profiteers and cartels in electricity, petroleum and rice, as well as the excise tax and value-added tax on power and oil, he said.

Metro Manila workers recieve P512 minimum wage a day. The real value or purchasing power of the minimum wage, however, has fallen to P340 a day, the group said.

The last wage increase, amounting to P21 per day, was granted to minimum-wage earners in Metro Manila on Oct. 5, 2017, out of the original petition of P184 per day.

It brought the daily minimum wage rate in the private sector to P512 from P491.

ALU-TUCP has also sought from the government a P500 monthly grocery subsidy for minimum-wage earners to help them cope with rising inflation and eroding wages.

Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello 3rd said he had recommended a P200 subsidy to the President, subject to the approval of the Departments of Finance and of Budget and Management. - By WILLIAM DEPASUPIL, TMT

Friday, October 19, 2018

Labor union pushes P320 wage increase

Current daily minimum wage - NWPC
The Alliance of Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines on Thursday urged the National Capital Region-Regional Wages and Productivity Board to grant its P320 wage increase petition amid rising prices of goods and the approval of a P1 fare hike for public utility vehicles.

“With the fare increase, there is now a very urgent need for the Metro Manila wage board to grant a substantial wage increase for workers in the NCR for them to survive in the light of the extraordinary increases in prices of basic goods and costs of services in the past 10 months, including this P1 jeepeny fare increase,” ALU-TUCP spokesman Alan Tanjusay told the Manila Standard.

He said that “a regional across-the-board wage increase of P320 is now needed in NCR because the existing P512 daily minimum wage is not enough for a household with at least five members to survive and live “a decent life.”

By law, the wage can only be raised after a year from the last increase, unless there is a supervening event that will merit an adjustment, the labor group said.

The increase in jeepney and bus fares and the continuing rise in the price of commodities would substantiate the supervening event to merit a wage hike.

Tanjusay said that the last minimum wage increase in Metro Manila took effect on Oct. 5, 2017. The current minimum wage is ₱512.

He said the TUCP would not oppose the P1 fare increase for PUJ granted by the LTFRB, because the increase will improve the take-home pay of the jeepney drivers and help their families cope with the current rate of inflation.

The NCR wage board will meet on Oct. 22 to determine how much of a wage hike to grant Metro Manila workers. -by Vito Barcelo

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Labor groups back jeepney fare hike

The Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines ( ALU-TUCP) will not oppose the P1 fare increase for public utility jeepney as this would help improve the take home pay of jeepney drivers.

Jeepneys pass by the elliptical road near the Quezon Memorial Circle in Quezon City to collect passengers Friday. (ALVIN KASIBAN / MANILA BULLETIN)

“We will not object to the P1 PUJ fare increase at this time because the increase will improve the take home pay of our jeepney drivers and help their families cope with the current incredible inflation,” said ALU-TUCP spokesperson Alan Tanjusay in a statement.

The workers group, however, said that the fare increase calls for a substantial wage increase for workers in the National Capital Region.

ALU TUCP cited the increase in the prices of goods and services as reasons for this.

“There is now a very urgent need for the Metro Manila wage board to grant a substabtial wage increase for workers in the NCR for them to survive in the light of the extraordinary increases in prices of basic goods and costs of services in the past ten months including this P1 jeepney fare increase,” Tanjusay said.

The Federation of Free Workers echoed the same call.

“Before the fare increase takes effect, the wage board should act soon. A paltry salary increase of 20 pesos in Metro Manila will most likely be eaten up this fare increase. A family of five who rides the jeepney at least once a day to get out of the house for work, school or the market, then ride the jeepney again to go back home, would have already used half of the 20 pesos just for jeepney fares,” FFW vice president Julius Cainglet said.

“Congress can do two things: Remove the additional and burdensome excise tax that the TRAIN Law introduced, and increase the wage of workers by legislation,” he added.

The NCR wage board will meet on Monday, October 22 to begin to determine how much amount is the wage increase for NCR workers. - By Leslie Ann Aquino