Bangkok Post

Scholar lashes minister’s compo stand

CHATU MONGKOL DEFENDS CALLING FOR HIGHER RATE

- PENCHAN CHAROENSUT­HIPAN

>>An academic has slammed Labour Minister MR Chatu Mongol Sonakul for failing to act in line with the board of the Social Security Office (SSO) decision regarding compensati­on payments to workers insured under the Social Security Act who lost their jobs or were suspended from work due to the Covid19 outbreak.

Yongyuth Chalamwong, a research director for labour developmen­t at the Thailand Developmen­t Research Institute (TDRI), said the board is run by a tripartite system comprising state agencies, employers and employees, with experts on social security issues to provide informatio­n and recommenda­tions for the board to make decisions.

The labour minister is a politician who oversees the SSO. However, no minister has ever gone contrary to a board decision before now, Mr Yongyuth said.

‘‘This is a major concern because it is about rules that separate the power of state officials and political officehold­ers. This is not right. Otherwise, politician­s will always interfere with the funds,’’ Mr Yongyuth said.

Previously, the SSO board voiced disagreeme­nt with the Labour Ministry’s plan to raise compensati­on payments to workers affected by the pandemic. The board stands by its March 24 decision that compensati­on for workers should be 50% of their wages capped at 15,000 baht a month for a period of two months.

The Labour Ministry, however, decided to raise the compensati­on payment from 50% to 62%, covering a period of three months. That proposal was approved by the cabinet on April 15. The minister has gone one up on that again, proposing 75%, though no decision on that has been made.

Labour activists have disagreed with the 62% payment as they saw it as a way for the government to pass the buck for compensati­on to the Social Security Fund (SSF).

Mr Yongyuth said the ministry must take responsibi­lity and think of ways to pay the difference in compensati­on payments such as an executive decree for borrowing to replenish the SSF. The maximum ceiling of the daily wage — 500 baht a day or 15,000 baht a month

— is used to calculate the compensati­on. The current rate of 62% comes to 9,300 baht a month. Based on that calculatio­n, the new 75% rate will total 11,250 baht a month.

Responding to criticism, MR Chatu Mongol yesterday defended his decision to raise the compensati­on payment to 62%, saying it is not fair for those who have paid contributi­ons to the SSF for 10 years but have not received the amount they deserve.

He said the SSO board gives advice and suggestion­s, and it is in the minister’s power to raise the compensati­on payment.

‘‘I did not approve it when they proposed 50%. I told them to review the matter. The permanent secretary for labour resubmitte­d with 62%, and I approved it as a ministeria­l regulation,’’ Mr Chatu Mongol said.

In a related developmen­t this week, MR Chatu Mongol on Wednesday said he would ask the cabinet to approve a further increase in compensati­on payouts to 75% of daily wages, which has also drawn flak from labour activists. If approved it will be retroactiv­e from March.

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