The Freeman

ENDO bill to weaken business survival

- Carlo Lorenciana, Staff Member

As "ENDO Bill" now nears passage, the Cebu business sector expresses its support to workers' security of tenure but raises perennial challenges faced by businessme­n.

"Laws should take into considerat­ion the plight of the business," Cebu Chamber of Commerce and Industry president Virgilio Espeleta told The FREEMAN yesterday, when asked whether the business group supports the bill's eventual passage.

"We should look at the whole economic ecosystem," the chamber president said.

On Wednesday, the Senate approved Senate Bill 1826 or the ENDO Bill, a measure that aims to end illegal contractua­lization and a reform President Duterte had promised when he campaigned for presidency in 2016.

"As we anticipate the passing of (this bill), we agree on the objective to 'protect workers who have suffered because of the evils of endo, a practice which corrupts the dignity of labor,' per Sen. Joel Villanueva, principal author of the bill," Espeleta said.

However, the business leader also expressed the concerns of companies.

"On the business side, the concern has always been about survival, competitiv­eness, influx of foreign players, importatio­n, increasing taxes, higher costs of doing business, plus bureaucrat­ic regulation­s that impede growth and sustainabi­lity," the CCCI official pointed out.

With today's challengin­g business environmen­t, he said there's no guarantee for business owners to survive.

"The appetite to go into business might be dampened if we do not take into account the concerns of enterprise­s who have yet to hurdle their birth and growth pains and adjust to business disruption­s amidst these regulation­s," he said.

Meanwhile, the ENDO Bill guarantees security of tenure for employees by preventing labor-only contractin­g. Espeleta said the sector welcomes the provision to classify workers into four types namely: regular, probationa­ry, project and seasonal.

"We enjoin our member-companies to ensure the well-being of their employees as well as generate their shared commitment to productivi­ty and meritocrac­y," he said.

The bill would also require contractor­s to obtain a license from the Department of Labor and Employment to engage on job contractin­g.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines