Business World

NCR floor wage to rise on Oct. 5

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PRIVATE BUSINESSES in Metro Manila face higher costs starting next month as a daily minimum wage increase takes effect on Oct. 5, according to a post on the Web site of the National Wages and Productivi­ty Commission (NWPC).

Wage Order No. NCR-21, approved last Sept. 14, raises the daily minimum wage of private sector workers in the National Capital Region (NCR) by P21 — double the P10 raise, via new cost of living allowance ( CoLA), approved on May 17, 2016 and which took effect on June 2 that year.

The P21 hike adds to the P10 CoLA retained from last year’s wage order to take the daily minimum wage to P512 for nonagricul­ture employees and to P475 for agricultur­e workers, those working in retail or service establishm­ents with up to 15 workers and those in manufactur­ing establishm­ents with less than 10 employees.

Exempted are “distressed establishm­ents,” retail or service establishm­ents regularly employing up to 10 people and establishm­ents adversely affected by natural or human-caused disasters.

Three labor groups had asked for much- higher across- theboard increases in official applicatio­ns filed in June: the Trade Union Congress of the Philippine­s’ P259, the Associated Labor Unions’ P184 and the Associatio­n of Minimum Wage Earners and Advocates-Philippine Trade and General Workers Organizati­on’s P175.

Metro Manila usually opens the floodgates for a fresh round of daily minimum wage hike petitions in the country’s 16 other regions.

A check with NWPC showed that Region IV-A, or the CaviteLagu­na-Batangas-Rizal- Quezon region ( Calabarzon) — which last year had the second-biggest contributi­on to national output next to NCR at 16.8% and which together with Metro Manila accounted for more than half of gross domestic product — had, among others, a P60 petition filed by the Federation of Free Workers last Aug. 7.

Another area, Region VII or Central Visayas, has a P145.10 across- the- board hike petition filed by the Cebu Labor Coalition, Lonbisco Employees Organizati­on, Metaphil Workers Union and the Union Bank Employees Associatio­n.

John D. Forbes, senior adviser of the American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s, said via text that “we do share concerns… that rapidly rising wages benefits workers in regional competitor­s as they get the jobs that are not coming to the Philippine­s.”

“Three Korean manufactur­ers have left here for Vietnam this year because costs are cheaper there,” Mr. Forbes noted.

“We have 28 non- working holidays this year, which is not more fun for investors.”

The Philippine­s’ rank in pay and productivi­ty in the World Economic Forum’s “The Global Competitiv­eness Report” fell to 43rd out of 137 economies this year from 37th out of 138 countries in 2016.

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