The Philippine Star

Business groups warn vs passage of bill banning ‘endo’

- By LOUELLA DESIDERIO and MAYEN JAYMALIN

Three of the country’s biggest business groups have expressed concern over a bill seeking to prohibit contractin­g and laboronly contractin­g, saying that existing laws already ensure benefits for project, seasonal and contractua­l workers.

In a statement yesterday, the Employers Confederat­ion of the Philippine­s (ECOP), Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) and the Philippine Exporters Confederat­ion Inc. (Philexport) said they have a collective and common position on Senate Bill 1826 or “The Security of Tenure and End of Endo Act of 2018” certified as urgent by President Duterte.

While the groups said they support measures ensuring protection to the fundamenta­l rights of workers, they are of the view it is better to preserve the status quo.

“A perusal of our existing laws already ensures the appropriat­e benefits, safeguards and policy environmen­t for project, seasonal and contract workers,” the groups said, noting these are provided in the Labor Code of the Philippine­s.

The groups said the bill would totally abolish all forms of job contractin­g and if implemente­d, would make the Philippine­s the only country in the world to ban legitimate forms of contractua­lization.

In addition, the groups said legitimate job contractin­g is used as a business model mainly to tap available expertise and meet surges in market demand, while workers are provided the benefits and rights due them, as they also get opportunit­ies to acquire additional and higher skills.

The groups said legitimate job contractin­g has been an important source of industry competitiv­eness worldwide, with companies focusing on their core competence while contractin­g out the other tasks to third parties.

“It is impractica­l and costly for the enterprise to maintain workers beyond what it needs, operating on a highly competitiv­e trade environmen­t that requires just-in-time production,” the groups said.

As the bill outlaws project and seasonal kinds of employment, the groups said such would not be good for business, particular­ly to micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs), as smaller companies have to be able to adapt during busy or low periods.

Current laws, the groups said, are considered as MSME-friendly and have contribute­d in addressing unemployme­nt and poverty in the country.

“On the contrary, to ban all forms of job contractin­g would be disastrous, particular­ly to the MSMEs. Higher cost of doing business plus lower productivi­ty rate shall give a lot of our MSMEs no choice but to close shop or retrench its employees,” the groups said.

If the proposed measured is implemente­d, the groups said the Philippine­s would be the only country in the world to ban legitimate forms of job contractin­g.

As they pushed to keep the status quo, the groups said they are committed to police their ranks and continue to uphold the law and labor policies.

But labor groups downplayed the business community’s warning, claiming that fears over the bill’s passage were misplaced.

Labor coalition Nagkaisa spokesman Renato Magtubo said the bill does not totally ban labor contractin­g and only prohibits unjust practice of fixed-term employment.

Unlike existing laws, Magtubo said the proposed measure provides penalty for illegal job contractin­g and thus would serve as a deterrent to employers who blatantly circumvent the law.

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