Manila Bulletin

ECOP warns against wage hike

Unemployed to bear brunt of salary adjustment­s

- By BERNIE CAHILES MAGKILAT

Awage hike at this time will only aggravate the situation of the unemployed sector of our labor force, the Employers’ Confederat­ion of the Philippine­s (ECOP) said Wednesday.

Acting President Sergio Ortiz Luis Jr. issued the warning following the spike in inflation that prompted organized labor to press for a new round of wage adjustment­s.

To placate restive workers, President Duterte has ordered the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) to convene the wage boards to revisit wage levels around the country and discuss the effect of the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law on workers.

Ortiz-Luis noted that the 1800 per day minimum wage nationwide, as proposed by the Associated Labor UnionsTrad­e Union Congress of the Philippine­s (ALU-TUCP), “will continue

to neglect the unemployed sector of our labor force.” “The pain of inflation triggered by a wage hike will worsen the plight of the rest of the wage and salary workers,” Ortiz-Luis said, adding that merely minimum wage earners benefit from any wage adjustment.

The estimated number of minimum wage earners nationwide stands at 3.2 million. This is less than 8 percent of the Philippine labor force. In the National capital Region (NCR), the estimated number of minimum wage earners stands at 952,485.

At the same time, Ortiz-Luis stated that “setting a national minimum wage will greatly impact on enterprise­s, especially the micro, small, and medium enterprise­s located in the regions which provide lower minimum wages as compared to the National Capital Region (NCR), and will definitely hamper business operations due to the dramatic increase in minimum wage.”

Based on data culled from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) as of 2016, there are 911,768 micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs) broken down as 820,795 (micro), 86,955 (small), and 4,018 (medium). These enterprise­s employed a total of 4,879,179 workers, with micro enterprise­s accounting for 2,345,992 workers, small enterprise­s with 1,981,316 workers, and medium enterprise­s with 551,871 workers.

Moreover, Ortiz-Luis said all wage orders may not be disturbed within one year of issuance unless a “supervenin­g condition” is declared by the wage board pursuant to the guidelines set by the National Wages and Productivi­ty Commission (NWPC). The last wage order, NCR-21, was issued on September 14, 2017 and took effect on October 5, 2017.

 ?? (Ali Vicoy) ?? WORKERS’ SENTIMENT – Unfazed by the employers confederat­ion’s opposition to any salary increase, rallyists from labor groups express their own sentiment in front of the DOTr building.
(Ali Vicoy) WORKERS’ SENTIMENT – Unfazed by the employers confederat­ion’s opposition to any salary increase, rallyists from labor groups express their own sentiment in front of the DOTr building.

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