Photo from Rappler |
In reaction to a report that telecoms and IT jobs got the highest
entry-level wages last year, the labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) stated
that salaries of low-paid workers should rise faster than higher waged ones.
“This is one way to achieve inclusive growth which is an avowed labor market
agenda of the government but is evidently not materializing,” averred Judy
Miranda, PM secretary-general.
The Jobs Street report revealed that entry-level jobs in telecoms and IT
command an average monthly salary of P19,000 to 20,000. “Telco and IT workers
deserve those wages and maybe even more. In comparison, the monthly minimum
wage in the NCR, which is the highest nationwide, is less than P14,000 and has
not risen in three years. In Eastern Visayas, the minimum wage is just above
P8,000. This wage disparity in non-agricultural wages is bad for workers and
not good for inclusion,” explained Miranda.
She added that “We should remember that many workers, many of them
women, are paid even less than the minimum. In the NCR, there are 1 million
minimum wage earners but more than 800,000 workers paid below the minimum. It
is worse nationwide: 2.4 million minimum wage earners but 8 million paid below
the minimum. These are numbers culled from the October 2020 data of the
Philippine Statistics Authority.”
PM is calling for raising the minimum wage
through direct wage increases combined with price discounts, social security
subsidies and public services provisioning. The group also advocates for the
abolition of regional wages and the institution of a national minimum wage.
“President Rodrigo Duterte once upon a time
promised to end the system of provincial wages. But similar to his betrayal of
the end endo pledge, Duterte will end his term with the regional wage system firmly
in place to cheapen workers’ wages. In contrast, Vice President Leni Robredo
has signed a covenant with labor groups which includes a provision for
establishing a national minimum wage and ways to achieve a living wage,”
Miranda avowed.
“Not only is a national minimum wage rational
since cost of living varies little across the country, it is also efficient
since dozens of regional and local minimum wages are difficult to enforce,”
Miranda argued.
PM is signatory to the covenant along with
labor centers and federations that have committed to support the tandem of Leni
Robredo and Kiko Pangilinan.
January 27, 2022