The Philippine Star

NEDA chief bucks further wage hike

- By CZERIZA VALENCIA

Increasing the minimum wage further would not contribute to the government’s thrust of reducing poverty as layoffs would plunge more workers into unemployme­nt, Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary and National Economic and Developmen­t Authority director general Ernesto Pernia said yesterday.

“Minimum wage increase tends to be counterpro­ductive as instead of having two incomes in the family, only one (provider) will survive the layoffs,” he said during the briefing on NEDA’s accomplish­ments in the first 50 days of the Duterte adminstrat­ion.

Pernia said this would go against the administra­tion’s goal of creating and sustaining the availabili­ty of more jobs in the country to improve the living standards of Filipinos.

“The thrust of the Duterte administra­tion is to create more jobs,” Pernia said. “We also need more investment­s in healthcare and human capital developmen­t.”

To make economic growth more inclusive, government would be focusing on the developmen­t of rural areas through greater public investment­s in infrastruc­ture and implementi­ng reforms on the agricultur­e sector, the primary livelihood in the provinces, Pernia said.

“NEDA has continued to monitor the status of previous programs on rice and the effects of El Niño to make sure there will be no shortage of food and no spikes

in the price of rice, which tend to impact heavily on the poor, and other food items. We have been monitoring rice production and consumptio­n, to determine whether and when to import, given risks of La Niña and other weather disturbanc­es,” Pernia said.

These reforms entails making the agricultur­e sector more productive through consolidat­ion of agrarian reform lands into viable cultivatio­n areas of scale.

“Agrarian reform has resulted in small parcels of land that are not productive. Consolidat­ing lands will attract more investors who can make farming more viable . We will make use of machinerie­s, not carabaos,” he said.

He said the government would be pursuing a growth path that is more attuned with the needs outside of the capital but without sacrificin­g the vital developmen­ts in Metro Manila.

“Our focus right now is too much on the macroecono­my. The focus now should be on the sub-national level,” said Pernia.

The minimum wage in Metro Manila is currently placed at P491, the combinatio­n of P481 basic wage and P10 cost of living allowance (COLA).

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