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Marcos pressed on wage hike ahead of SoNA

Marcos pressed on wage hike ahead of SoNA
Photo courtesy of President Bongbong Marcos/facebook
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Progressive partylist Akbayan on Friday strongly urged President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to include the proposed P200 legislated wage hike in the priority bills he would want Congress to pass in the last three years of his term.

The group made the call ahead of Marcos’ fourth State of the Nation Address (SoNA) on 28 July, which would mark the middle of his term in office.

“The patchwork wage increases being given by wage boards are no longer enough, and the calls to tighten belts simply won’t work anymore,” said Rep. Peri Cendaña in the vernacular. “Workers are already writhing in pain from consistently tightening their belts.”

The Marcos administration’s performance rating plunged in a recent survey by Pulse Asia, with nearly two-thirds, or 66 percent, of 1,200 adult respondents saying they disapproved of how the government was managing inflation.

Last month’s inflation rate rose slightly to 1.4 percent from 1.3 percent in May, driven primarily by the high cost of housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels.

The Pulse Asia survey also showed that 48 percent of the respondents expressed disapproval of the administration’s handling of workers’ wages — the fastest-rising national concern for Filipinos, jumping by 17 percent since April.

‘Wake up call’

Cendaña said Marcos must take his cue from the survey — which has revealed the growing discontent of the public with his government — to finally sign into law the long-overdue proposal for a P200 increase in the daily minimum wage of workers in the private sector.

He said Marcos certifying the bill as urgent will allow Congress to give due priority to the swift passage of the measure and prevent it from lapsing, as happened in past Congresses.

The farthest the proposed wage hike had come was in the recently concluded 19th Congress, when both the House of Representatives and the Senate passed the measure on final reading.

The last bicam to harmonize the conflicting provisions of the House and the Senate’s version, however, doomed the bill. The House had approved a P200 daily wage hike, while the Senate had proposed a P100 increase.

The bicam is the final stage in Congress before any approved bills are transmitted to Malacañang for the President’s signature.

With neither the House nor the Senate willing to compromise, the measure effectively died along with the adjournment of the 19th Congress.

Step up, Mr. President

“There are only three years left in the President’s term, but there is still no major improvement in the income of Filipinos. Our workers deserve the strongest support from the government to survive the deluge of inflation. They need this lifeline against rising prices,” Cendaña stressed.

Had the proposed P200 wage hike passed, the legislation would have marked the first across-the-board wage increase since the 1989 Wage Rationalization Act, nearly four decades ago.

Marcos had openly expressed reservations about supporting the proposed wage hike, citing its economic and inflationary implications and adverse effect on businesses, particularly micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), which account for 84 percent of the country’s total employment.

The Employers Confederation of the Philippines, the largest business group in the country, has religiously opposed the clamor for a wage hike, warning that it would severely impact MSMEs, lay off workers, and force small businesses to shut down.

ECOP president Sergio Ortiz-Luis Jr. earlier said only 10 percent to 16 percent of the country’s 52 million workforce would benefit from the wage hike, leaving the staggering 84 percent, or those who have no employers, with no salary adjustments.

The current daily minimum wage for private employees in Metro Manila is now pegged at P695 after the Regional Wage Board approved a P50 increase on 30 June. The salary adjustment took effect on Friday, 18 July.

Several bills calling for a wage hike have been filed in the present 20th Congress, with some proposing to increase the daily take-home pay of workers to as high as P1,200.

Various labor groups led by the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines have consistently pressed Marcos to order Congress to swiftly pass the wage hike and have him sign it into law.

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