The Borneo Post (Sabah)

RM1,500 minimum wage receives mixed reactions

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KUALA LUMPUR: The minimum wage rate of RM1,500 expected to be gazetted this month has received mixed reactions from different organisati­ons within the country.

Malaysian Trade Union Congress (MTUC) president Datuk Abdul Halim Mansor said it fully supported the increase in minimum wage increase over the next five years, provided there was no pressure on any parties, especially employers.

"MTUC is still fighting to raise the minimum wage rate for employees to no less than RM1,500. We made a decision on this (minimum wage increase) through surveys conducted with the National Wage Legislativ­e Technical Committee and the discussion­s at the MTUC Delegates Conference.

"It covers a number of aspects, that the minimum wage should be implemente­d only for local workers in all sectors, besides the fact that the wage rate must be effective and in line with job responsibi­lities," he said when contacted by Bernama yesterday.

In a question-and-answer session at the Dewan Rakyat on Thursday, Human Resources Minister M Kula Segaran said the new minimum wage rate was in line with Pakatan Harapan's (PH) promise in the 14th General Election, with a review every two years.

However, Malaysian Employers Federation executive director Datuk Shamsuddin Bardan was of the opinion that it is unfair for employers to bear the burden of the increase in wages.

"In its manifesto in GE14, the PH government promised to help employers by subsidisin­g 50 per cent of any increase in the minimum wage, but now the government says it does not have the money to pay the subsidy.

"The question is whether it is fair for employers to bear 100 per cent of the increase in wages when the government itself had promised to provide the subsidy," he said. - Bernama

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