The Philippine Star

ECOP bucks further wage hike, higher SSS contributi­on

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

Employers are against any further increase in the minimum wage as well as to the proposed hike in the monthly contributi­on of Social Security System (SSS) members.

Employers Confederat­ion of the Philippine­s (ECOP) president Donald Dee said the current minimum wage in the National Capital Region (NCR) is already among the highest in the region, while the planned SSS contributi­on increase would only serve as a “band aid solution.”

“We cannot anymore increase (the minimum wage). We are already the highest in Southeast Asia. It’s out of the question,” Dee said.

Minimum wage earners in the private sector in Metro Manila started receiving an additional P21 per day in their basic pay since Oct. 5, following the approval of the Regional Tri- partite Wages and Productivi­ty Board-National Capital Region of Wage Order NCR-21 which prescribed new wage levels for all minimum wage earners. It also sets the minimum wage for non-agricultur­al workers to P512 from P491.

Including benefits, Dee said a minimum wage earner in NCR currently takes home a total of around P700 a day.

“From the beginning we said it is not going to help because the mindset is since the peso is depreciati­ng, let’s pass it on to wages. What kind of solution is this?” Dee said.

“What I am going to push for is for Pag-IBIG to front end the building of dormitorie­s so Dee our workers can live within the area where they work and they save on transporta­tion, the monthings ey therefore they can use for other expenses because transporta­tion is a big component of their income. So it’s like these that need to be looked at,” he said.

Meanwhile, Dee said the proposed SSS contributi­on increase is also being opposed by ECOP “because this is additional cost.”

“This thing of SSS is additional cost. It is band aid because we’re not looking at how efficient their investment­s have been,” he said.

The state pension fund is under pressure to increase pension for retirees.

“We recognize the burden of trying to cover the difficulti­es or the undervalui­ng of the pension because our old people are saying that it’s not enough. But you cannot always do a short term or band aid solution because this is like what happened in the wages. Government just tends to do band aid solutions,” he said.

Dee said ECOP would submit its official position paper together with its suggestion­s to the SSS next month.

SSS president and chief executive officer Emmanuel Dooc earlier said the pension fund would push through with the planned increase in members’ contributi­ons in 2018, a year after President Duterte granted a P1,000 hike in ben- efits to pensioners.

This, however, was contradict­ed by SSS chairman Amado Valdez who said there is no plan yet to undertake such hike and that the contributi­on increase is being considered as a last option.

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