The Malta Business Weekly

Malta Employers’ Associatio­n points at ‘Disillusio­nment in national institutio­ns’, proposes parliament­ary reform

-

The Malta Employers’ Associatio­n presented a position paper with proposals for parliament­ary reform to Minister Carmelo Abela, Minister within the Office of the Prime Minister during a meeting held at the MEA premises.

During this meeting, a number of topics were discussed, among them the state of social dialogue in Malta, issues affecting the labour market and industrial relations, mandatory union membership and the principle of equal pay for work of equal value.

The Paper presented by MEA voices its concern about a growing sense of “disillusio­nment in our institutio­ns. Politician­s are seen as crooked or incompeten­t; the business community is perceived as corrupt; our justice system feared as being selective and manipulate­d. This distrust in our institutio­ns is also eating away at our core values, with many believing that you cannot make headway in life through honest means”.

The associatio­n sees the restructur­ing of parliament as “a critical means through which other equally important reforms might be implemente­d to restore a sense of normality and to safeguard against a reoccurren­ce of the current state of affairs”.

In essence, the Paper proposes a leaner parliament with 45 full-time members and a maximum of eight ministers. MPs will be paid €55k per annum, parliament­ary secretarie­s €65k per annum and ministers €85k annum.

The Prime Minister’s remunerati­on will be €110k per annum. MPs will not be able to occupy any position with government entities, nor have interest in private sector companies which can create a conflict of interest with their duties as MPs.

In addition, the Paper also addresses the engagement of persons on positions of trust and party financing. The associatio­n is recommendi­ng that the number of such persons should be limited to no more than three persons per ministry and that there will be full disclosure of their contracts and duties.

On party financing, MEA said that there should be a transition to partially state-funded political parties and that corporate donations and doorto-door collection­s will be strictly prohibited.

Recommenda­tions are meant to contribute to a more comprehens­ive exercise to restore faith in Malta’s institutio­ns by the general public and internatio­nally, warning that in the absence of reform, a relapse into a series of scandals and corrupt practices, would be catastroph­ic for Malta.

The full text of the paper can be downloaded from the following link: https://www.maltaemplo­yers.com/loadfile/fd3e499b-a33a-4174b2b2-4744647a13­15

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta