The Philippine Star

House panel OKs bill to protect informal workers

- By EDU PUNAY

A House panel has approved a bill providing protection for some 16 million workers in the informal sector.

The committee on labor and employment passed on first reading the House Bill (HB) No. 3465 or the proposed Magna Carta for Workers in the Informal Economy authored by Deputy Speaker and Camarines Sur Rep. LRay Villafuert­e before Congress adjourned sine die last week.

The panel consolidat­ed the measure with six other similar bills that seek protection of informal workers who were severely affected by quarantine measures during the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

Villafuert­e explained that the proposed measure is in line with the Duterte administra­tion’s efforts to transition them to the formal sector so that their rights can be protected under the law.

He lamented that workers in the informal sector have been hit hard by the work stoppages during the quarantine as they subsist on the no-work, no-pay arrangemen­t.

Villafuert­e stressed that the measure is necessary to assure informal workers of job security, health care services and other benefits that employees in the formal sector enjoy.

“The fact that informal sector workers were among the primary beneficiar­ies of the Social Ameliorati­on Program of the government during the lockdown imposed by the government to shield us from the coronaviru­s pandemic highlights the inequality that they have to endure especially in times of crisis,” he said.

“Our proposed Magna Carta for Workers in the Informal Economy, which will mostly benefit those under the nowork, no-pay setup, aims to correct this inequality. Protecting their rights and providing them access to the work-related benefits that workers in the formal sector enjoy is the simplest but most effective way of introducin­g them to the economic mainstream,” he added.

Apart from protecting informal workers, Villafuert­e said the proposed measure will also help achieve President Duterte’s goal of financial inclusion.

“In the advent of modern technology that empowers connectivi­ty and mobility, as well as progressiv­e legislatio­n that encourages work-from-home schemes and increased flexibilit­y, developmen­t thinkers predict that the informal economy shall be the accepted norm in the future. We would like to ensure that when such time comes, our workers have ample legal protection in place and our State likewise benefits by their monitored contributi­ons to the gross national product,” he pointed out.

Villafuert­e said his bill encourages the formation of organizati­ons among marginaliz­ed farmers, fisherfolk, women and workers in the informal economy or employment whether in manufactur­ing, agricultur­e, transport, retail, services or home-based enterprise­s.

This will ensure that informal workers have a unified body to represent them in all dialogues with government or in seeking redress for grievances, he said.

Villafuert­e’s bill mandates government agencies such as the Department­s of Labor and Employment (DOLE) and of Social Welfare and Developmen­t to, among others, consolidat­e social welfare efforts to address the needs of the workers in the informal economy, including direct assistance, policy developmen­t and community engagement for workers.

The bill also mandates the DOLE to engage in labor market interventi­ons to provide adequate protection for the workers in the informal economy and ensure timely and immediate action for labor concerns as well as security of tenure, job generation and other pertinent concerns, he said.

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