Business World

NEDA warns of legislated wage hike impact on MSMEs

- Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson

MICRO-, SMALL- AND MEDIUM-SIZED enterprise­s (MSMEs) may not be able to cope with the proposed minimum wage increase now under considerat­ion in Congress, the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) said.

“One of the things we’re looking at is affordabil­ity levels, especially for MSMEs,” NEDA Undersecre­tary Rosemarie G. Edillon told reporters late Monday.

The Senate on Monday approved on third and final reading a bill that seeks to impose a P100 across-the-board minimum wage hike for private sector workers.

The last legislated national wage hike was in 1989. Since then, pay rates have been decided by regional wage boards.

The House of Representa­tives has yet to deliberate on a counterpar­t bill. The chamber is currently studying a proposal for a P350 to P400 minimum wage hike, while separate bills have been filed for P750 and P150 wage increases.

Ms. Edillon said NEDA studied the impact of the proposed wage hike may offset company savings generated by the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprise­s (CREATE) law.

“That’s one of the things that can provide a windfall. But we saw that for MSMEs, they will not be able to manage. The savings from CREATE will not be enough to cover the additional wage increase.”

Ms. Edillon said that large enterprise­s will manage to pay more. “The problem is if you increase minimum wage, (you have to increase everything) and there will be distortion­s.”

CREATE was signed into law in 2021 to support enterprise­s recovering from the coronaviru­s pandemic. It reduced corporate income tax rates, provided tax relief measures, and rationaliz­ed fiscal incentives.

The House is set to deliberate amendments to the CREATE law to simplify and streamline tax and incentive systems.

The proposed changes seek to impose a 20% corporate income tax under the enhanced deduction income tax regime and provide value-added tax (VAT) exemptions for enterprise­s devoted entirely to the export market.

Calixto V. Chikiamco, Foundation for Economic Freedom (FEF) president, said in a Viber message that the legislated wage increase will “reduce employment, punish SMEs and scare off investors.”

In an earlier statement, the FEF said the wage increase does not account for the cost factors and employment situations in the various regions.

The group warned that it would force smalland medium-sized enterprise­s to lay off workers or even close operations.

“It will only cause more suffering for informal workers, such as seasonal workers, fishermen, gig economy workers, and market vendors, because they won’t benefit from the mandated daily wage increase but will suffer from the higher inflation that the bill, if passed into law, will bring.”

Mr. Chikiamco recommende­d to instead raise the disposable income of all consumers by liberalizi­ng imports.

Last year, Metro Manila workers received a P40 increase in their daily minimum wage.

Other regions that approved wage increases were Cagayan Valley (P30), Ilocos region (P35), Central Luzon (P40), Central Mindanao (P35), Western Visayas (P30) and Southern Tagalog (P35 to P50). —

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