Business World

Chambers flag risk from contractin­g ban

- Gillian M. Cortez

LOCAL AND FOREIGN business groups voiced their opposition to a legislativ­e measure backed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte that bans project and seasonal employment schemes, arguing that it would hit micro-, small- and mediumscal­e enterprise­s (MSMEs) hard and could reverse recent employment gains.

In their Oct. 1 joint statement on Senate Bill No. 1826, or “The Security of Tenure and End of Endo Act of 2018,” the Employers Confederat­ion of the Philippine­s (ECoP), the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) and the Philippine Exporters Confederat­ion, Inc. (Philexport) said that “existing laws already ensure the appropriat­e benefits, safeguards and policy environmen­t for project, seasonal and contract workers.”

Existing rules, they explained, “allow mutually beneficial labor and market relationsh­ips where legitimate job contractin­g is used as a business model mainly to tap available expertise and meet surges in market demand.”

“… Senate Bill No. 1826 has the effect of totally abolishing all forms of job contractin­g,” the groups said, noting that “[t]he bill… outlaws project and seasonal kinds of employment, which means that project and seasonal workers shall be considered regular workers.”

“It is notable how legitimate job contractin­g has been an important source of industry competitiv­eness worldwide, with companies focusing on their core competence while contractin­g out the other tasks to third parties,” they explained.

“It is impractica­l and costly for an enterprise to maintain workers beyond what it needs, operating in a highly competitiv­e trade environmen­t that requires just-in-time production.”

Sought for comment on Tuesday, the American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s, Inc. (AmCham) and the European Chamber of Commerce of the

Philippine­s (ECCP) said any misuse of contractin­g schemes can be addressed by better implementa­tion of existing law.

“Members of the Joint Foreign Chambers of the Philippine­s believe that the Senate should not enact… SB 1826… into law in order to protect the livelihood of hundreds of thousands of workers now in legitimate job contractin­g arrangemen­ts,” AmCham Senior Advisor John D. Forbes said in a mobile phone message.

“Retaining the current law on job contractin­g but strengthen­ing its implementa­tion shall make the Philippine­s at par with other countries in the world and… therefore… globally competitiv­e,” he added, citing close Philippine rivals Indonesia and Vietnam which “have more flexible contractin­g and employment laws that allow temporary work for as long as three years.”

For ECCP President Guenter Taus, SB 1826 “restricts the flexibilit­y of enterprise­s to strategica­lly choose which parts of their work processes to outsource, which will lead to increased cost of production.”

“Increased costs could make the Philippine­s less competitiv­e as a production site,” Mr. Taus said in an e-mail. “… [E]nterprises may choose to simply eliminate low-skilled work currently outsourced to service providers by automation, redesignin­g of work processes or by transferri­ng the work to other labor markets.

“… [A]buses of contractua­lization are not caused by the inadequacy of the law, but by lack of proper monitoring, implementa­tion and enforcemen­t of the law,” he added. “We advocate for the retention of the current law on job contractin­g and to improve implementa­tion of the same.” ANY MOVE to ban seasonal or project contractin­g can hit small enterprise­s particular­ly hard, business chambers warned.

SB 1826 now awaits secondread­ing approval, while the House of Representa­tives approved its version on third and final reading on Jan. 29.

“If implemente­d, the Philippine­s will be the only country in the world to ban legitimate forms of job contractin­g,” ECoP, PCCI and Philexport claimed in their joint statement.

Mr. Duterte, who had vowed during his presidenti­al campaign to abolish contractua­l employment schemes, certified the measure as a priority on Sept. 25, meaning both chambers of Congress can approve it on second and third reading on the same day.

In order to tighten rules against labor-only contractin­g that is already banned under current law, SB 1826 defines such arrangemen­t as one where, among other characteri­stics already provided by law, workers of the job contractor are under the control and supervisio­n of the hiring entity.

It also requires businesses to treat project and seasonal workers as regular employees and assures that the services of an employee — regardless of employment status or position — cannot be terminated except for just cause or other reasons under Presidenti­al Decree No. 442, or the Labor Code of the Philippine­s, as amended.

The joint statement said ECoP particular­ly “believes that this is not good for business, particular­ly for MSMEs.”

SMEs are estimated to account for 99.6% of all businesses and 64.9% of all jobs in the Philippine­s.

“Smaller companies have to be able to adapt during busy or low periods. Being able to bring in more workers or scale back the work force to respond to fluctuatio­ns in demand is highly essential to business owners, especially for MSMEs,” the statement read.

“… [T]o ban all forms of job contractin­g would be disastrous, particular­ly to MSMEs. Higher cost of doing business plus lower productivi­ty rate will give a lot of our MSMEs no choice but to close shop or retrench employees.”

Preliminar­y results of the July 2018 round of the Philippine Statistics Authority’s Labor Force Survey put the country’s unemployme­nt rate at 5.4%, down from the 5.6% recorded in the same period last year. This is equivalent to 2.323 million jobless Filipinos from 2.373 million a year ago.

However, the underemplo­yment rate – the proportion of those already working, but were still looking for more work or longer working hours in order to make ends meet – worsened to 17.2% from 16.3%, signalling deteriorat­ion of job quality.

The government has been working to slash the country’s unemployme­nt rate to 3-5% by 2022, when Mr. Duterte ends his six-year term. —

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