Showing posts with label P100. Show all posts
Showing posts with label P100. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Reporma Lagpas kay Sara! Legislated Wage Hike, Now Na!

PAHAYAG

Partido Manggagawa

June 10, 2024


Tama, pero kapos. Tuloy, pero bitin. Ganito namin inilalarawan sa PM ang mga kaganapan ngayon, sa dalawang huling nalalabing araw ng sesyon ng Kongreso.


Salamat naman at si SP Chiz Escudero ay nahimasmasan, tumiklop sa kahihiyan kahit na hanggang sa dulo ay kimkim ang sama ng loob sa pagkatalo ng kanyang posisyon. Dahil sa kanyang paliwanag, kahit na may salitang “forthwith” na dapat sundin, ang impeachment trial ay hindi dapat minamadali. Ibig sabihin, pwedeng mabagal, pwedeng dahan-dahan. O pwedeng hindi na lang.


Teka-teka ang tawag sa ganitong pulitika. Ganito ang pulitika na hindi nakatuntong sa matibay na panininindigan para sa tama at mali, sa nararapat at hindi. Ganito ang makasariling pulitika, ang timbangan ay nakasentro sa sarili o kaya ay sa dynasty. Ngunita lam natin na hindi solo ni Chiz ang ganitong pulitika.


Makikita natin ang marami sa kanila sa proseso mismo ng impeachment, kapag nagsimula na ang trial. May inisyal nang palatandaan. Kagabi ay siyam lamang ang bumoto pabor sa “proceed”, anim ang tumutol, at walo ang nyutral. Neutral? May ganun? Magbabago ang komposisyon ng Senado sa 20th Congress kaya’t magkakaroon pa ng rigodon.


Subalit kung nababagalan ang marami sa takbo ng impeachment, ano pa sa tinatakbo ng legislated wage hike? February last year pa naipasa ng Senado ang P100 increase, pero sa Kamara nito lamang nakaraang linggo naipasa ang P200. Para mapabilis ay dapat nag-usap na ang bicameral panel para dito, pero wala pa. Dahil dito ay mamimiligrong hindi ito maipasa.


Ito ang dahilan kung bakit hinihimok din namin mga ang mga mambabatas na manumpa, hindi lamang bilang mga justice at prosecutor sa impeachment court, kundi para maipasa ang legislated wage hike na nakabinbin ngayon sa Kongreso.


Nakapanumpa na si SP Chiz Escudero bilang presiding justice at maaring ngayon o bukas ay manumpa na rin ang lahat ng senador.  Subalit ang wage hike ay wala pang naitatalagang conferees ang Senado para sa Bicam. May mga pahayag din mula sa ilang Senador na bubusisiin pa nila ng husto ang naipasa nilang panukala, bagay na lalong magpapabagal o ganap na pumigil sa pagpasa nito. 


Matatagalan ang nabuksang paglilitis sa impeachment dahil tatawid pa ito sa 20th Congress, samantalang ang wage hike bill na P100-P200 ay naghihingalo sa antas ng bicam at nanganganib pang di makarating sa Palasyo para maging batas. Nanunulay din ito sa presyur ng capitalist veto dahil sa pagtutol ng mga negosyante at economic managers ni Bongbong Marcos. 


Naniniwala kami na may magagawa pa ang Kongreso kung magkakaisa lamamg ang dalawang Kapulungan na maipasa ang wage hike bill kahit nasa last two minutes na tayo ng labanan. Kung hindi ito magagawa, ito ay pagtalikod sa kanilang tungkulin at pagyuko sa capitalist lobby laban sa manggagawa.


Ang ganitong kabiguan ay lalo lamang magpapatibay at magpapatunay sa aming paniniwala na kapos ang impeachment ni Sara kung walang kaakibat na mga reporma, katulad sa mga naunang impeachment.  


Naninindigan kami na ang reporma ay dapat lagpas sa impeachment ni Sara, at ang pagtugon sa kahilingan ng mga manggagawa na baguhin ang maling patakaran na naglibing sa sweldo sa starvation at poverty level ay mas malaking inhustisya na dapat ituwid ng mga mambabatas. 


Reporma Lagpas kay Sara! Legislated Wage Hike, Now Na!


Maraming salamat!

Take Your Vow for a Wage Hike Too

We, the workers, also urge lawmakers to take an oath—not just as judges and prosecutors in the impeachment court—but to pass the long-pending legislated wage hike currently stalled in Congress. 

 

Earlier, Senate President Chiz Escudero took his oath as presiding judge, and today or tomorrow, senators may don their judicial robes to swear into their roles. 

 

However, the wage hike bill still lacks Senate conferees for the Bicameral Conference Committee. Some senators have even stated that they will thoroughly review the proposal they had already approved, which could stall its passage in the remaining two days. 

 

The impeachment trial that has begun will drag on into the 20th Congress, while the P100-P200 wage hike bill languishes in the bicameral stage, at risk of never reaching Malacañang to become law. 

 

The wage hike bill also faces intense pressure of a capitalist veto due to opposition from business groups and Bongbong Marcos’ economic managers. 

 

We believe Congress still has the persuasive power to pass this bill—even in the last two minutes of the session—if both chambers unite. 

 

Failure to do so would be a betrayal of duty and a surrender to the capitalist lobby against workers. 

 

This failure would only reinforce our belief that Sara’s impeachment alone is insufficient without accompanying reforms, as seen in past impeachments. 

 

Reform must go beyond Sara’s impeachment. Addressing workers’ demands to reverse policies that keep wages at starvation and poverty levels is a far greater injustice that lawmakers need to rectify.

 

Enough Lies, Pass the Wage Hike Now

Once again, the Economic Team of the Office of the President has shown us whose side they’re really on: Big Business. And honestly - who’s surprised?

 

Their so-called “strong reservations” against the PHP 200 wage hike are nothing new. They’ve simply recycled the same tired scare tactics of employers - this time wrapped in pseudo-scientific jargon and dressed up as "economic modeling."

Let’s be clear:

 

- The numbers they’re using? Dubious at best.

- The assumptions? Hidden.

- The intent? To kill the wage hike and protect corporate profits.

 

Where were these numbers during months of public hearings in Congress? Nowhere. Suddenly they appear-just in time to sabotage the people’s demand for wage justice. It’s not policy - it’s propaganda.

 

And what do they offer workers instead?

 

More empty promises: enforce the minimum wage law (which they can’t even do), promote collective bargaining (in a country where union rights are under attack), and link wages to productivity (when workers don’t even get regular jobs).

 

Let’s talk about reality:

* Less than 5% of workers are unionized.

* Contractualization is rampant.

* Red-tagging and harassment of unionists continue—with the full knowledge or blessing of the State.

 

How can you bargain when you're not even allowed to organize?

 

How can you fight for better wages when your job is disposable?

 

The truth is this: Workers have waited long enough.

 

For far too long, workers have endured soaring prices, stagnating wages, and broken promises from both employers and government.

 

The wage hike is long overdue!

It’s not charity - it’s justice.

It’s not inflationary - it’s humane.

It won’t crash the economy - it will lift millions out of poverty and fuel real growth from the bottom up.

 

To Congress:

 

You can side with the spin doctors of the elite - or you can stand with the people who build this country every single day.

 

Enough delays. Enough lies.

 

Pass the legislated wage hike NOW.

 

Press Statement

10 June 2025

NAGKAISA Labor Coalition

Monday, June 9, 2025

Workers troop to Senate for P200 wage hike as urgent reform along with impeachment


 

Members of labor groups Partido Manggagawa (PM) and the Nagkaisa labor coalition trooped to the Senate this morning for the final push for the legislated P200 salary increase. Some 400 workers and supporters joined the mobilization at the Senate to call for the immediate convening of the bicameral committee to come up with a final version. The Senate passed a P100 wage hike while the House of Representatives enacted P200.

 

“We demand that Congress proceed forthwith with organizing the bicam for a final version of the legislated wage increase,” asserted Judy Miranda, PM secretary general.

 

About 100 PM members accompanied Miranda in the Senate rally this morning. Later in the afternoon, the group also linked up with multi-sectoral organizations Kalipunan and Tindig Pilipinas which are calling for the impeachment trial of Vice President Sara Duterte to proceed.

 

PM is supporting the call for accountability by Sara Duterte but is insisting that social reforms—such as the wage hike—must be enacted aside from the impeachment of the Vice President. PM raised the demand “Reporma lagpas kay Sara” in the mobilization today. This was also the group’s position when the impeachment case was filed against the Vice President last year.

 

Miranda added that “The P200 wage hike is not excessive but responds appropriately to the wage recovery demand and workers’ just share in the fruits of production. Rigorous research belies the black propaganda and blackmail of employers against wage hikes.” Several academic studies in the Philippines and in other countries have found that substantial salary adjustments do not lead to job losses or higher prices.

 

Sunday, June 8, 2025

CONVENE BICAM NOW: RECONCILE WAGE HIKES BEFORE TIME RUNS OUT


The Senate must urgently convene the bicameral conference committee to reconcile the proposed wage increases—P200 (House) and P100 (Senate)—and ratify a final version before Congress adjourns. With only three session days left, any delay at the bicam level risks killing this historic opportunity to grant workers a long-overdue, substantial wage hike. 

 

The constitutional duty of Congress does not end with passing bills; it includes ensuring their timely enactment. While the Senate must comply with its impeachment mandate, it should not neglect its equally critical obligation to workers struggling under stagnant wages. 

 

Even if the bicam beats the clock, the fight is not over: The bill still needs the President’s signature. But combined pressure from Congress and sustained mobilization by labor groups can break the gridlock. The government must act decisively—inaction will only embolden employers who have always opposed wage hikes, no matter how modest. 

 

The choice is clear: Side with workers demanding dignity or surrender to capitalist veto. We call on both chambers to prioritize the bicam, and on Malacañang to heed the people’s call. The time for collective action is now.


Thursday, June 5, 2025

Guarded optimism on passage of the P200 wage hike

"This is good news, but workers are holding back their full joy over the House of Representatives’ passage of the proposed P200 wage increase," said Renato Magtubo, Chairperson of Partido Manggagawa.

 

This is because only three session days remain in the 19th Congress, and during this "hour of danger," the Bicameral Conference Committee must quickly come to an agreement, since the Senate had earlier passed only a P100 increase. After this, the agreed-upon version must be signed by the President to become law.

 

"However, if Malacañang and Congress truly want to, nothing is impossible. Even the impeachment of Sara Duterte could be pursued. That’s what we call political will — something workers always find lacking in government," Magtubo added.

 

Magtubo also said that workers have many more grievances that need to be addressed by Malacañang and Congress, such as the ending of contractualization or ‘endo’, which they will continue to fight for in the upcoming 20th Congress. 

PRESS STATEMENT
05 June 2025

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Reaksyon sa pagpasa ng P200 dagdag-sweldo sa Kamara

“Magandang balita subalit pigil pa sa kasiyahan ang manggagawa sa pagkakapasa sa Mababang Kapulungan ng Kongreso sa panukalang P200 na dagdag-sahod,” pahayag ng Tagapangulo ng Partido Manggagawa na si Renato Magtubo.

Ito ay dahil may tatlong araw na lamang ang natitirang sesyon ng 19th Congress at sa loob ng ora de peligro na ito ay dapat magkasundo agad ang Bicameral Conference Committee dahil P100 naman ang naunang naipasa ng Senado. Matapos ito ay kailangang lagdaan ng Pangulo ang napagkasunduang bersyon para maging batas.

“Subalit kung talagang gugustuhin ng Palasyo at Kongreso, walang imposible. Kahit nga ang impeachment ni Sara Duterte ay kakayanin pa. Political will ang tawag dyan na siyang laging pagkukulang na hinahanap ng manggagawa sa gobyerno, dagdag ni Magtubo.

Sinabi pa ni Magtubo na marami pang mga hinaing ang manggagawa na kailangang aksyunan ng Palasyo at Kongreso katulad ng pagwawakas sa endo at patuloy itong ipaglalaban sa paparating na 20th Congress. 

PRESS STATEMENT
04 June 2025

Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Wage clustering is better than regionalization but one national minimum wage is best

 


According to Partido Manggagawa (PM), the proposal of Representative Joel R. Chua (3rd District of Manila) to replace the current wage regionalization scheme with a wage clustering system is welcome in the sense that it founded on a recognition of the failures of the existing wage fixing system and thus opens a window for a discussion of a better mechanism. “Wage clustering is better than regionalization but one national minimum wage is best,” Rene Magtubo, PM national chair, explained.

 

He added that “We agree, as Rep. Chua asserts, that wage regionalization has led a huge gap between wages of regions that are not substantiated by differences in cost of living, and also has led to complexity in implementation as the DOLE has to monitor almost 50 minimum wages across the country.”

 

For this reason, PM is pushing for a national minimum wage as a floor. Differences between actual wages should be based on seniority, skills and productivity, according to the group.

 

“Also, while we insist that a replacement to the wage regionalization mechanism is also overdue, let us not lose sight of the immediate demand for a P150 across-the-board legislated wage recovery,” Magtubo emphasized.

 

PM is advocating for an “Apat na Dapat” in regard to the wage issue at the moment:

 

1. Php 150 across the board wage increase to recover wage loss due to inflation (immediate);

 

2. Non-wage benefits to enhance take home pay (for example: suspension of Philhealth contributions, reduction in withholding taxes for fixed income earners, social security subsidies, etc.);

 

3. Review and amend RA 6727 with the end in view of having uniform wage rates and satisfying the constitutional mandate of granting workers a living wage;

 

4. Enhance wage and benefits setting through collective bargaining negotiations by implementing the recommendations of the International Labour Organization’s High-Level Tripartite Mission so that workers can exercise freedom of association without harassment and intimidations, and unwarranted regulations. 

 

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Labor group to ECOP: You also need to feel how bad life is for ordinary workers

 


We can try to understand how employers feel about the pending wage hike proposals in Congress. But their permanent opposition to any proposal since time immemorial speaks volumes about their regard for the lives of ordinary workers in our country.

 

We see them constantly opposed to any wage hike proposal at the level of regional wage boards since 1989, and against the legislated wage proposals since 1999.

 

In other words, they will cry wolf against any wage proposal, but neglect to mention how workers suffered a life of poverty. They won’t tell us that GDP and labor productivity more than doubled during the last three decades, but real wages of workers remained flat.

 

In fact, even as they up the hype of apocalyptic death of local industry and el niño of foreign investors, the fact remains that minimum wages all over the country fall under the national poverty threshold of P13,797 per month for a family of five. The same is true when economic managers assure everyone that GDP will remain within the 6% trajectory. That won’t change the fact that after 35 years under the regional wage boards, guided by thousands of pages of Philippine Development Plans, more than 20% of our population remains poor, or close to half, according to the latest SWS survey on self-rated poverty.

 

The problem is that employers don’t feel this way as they always view wage hikes, union rights, and equitable distribution of wealth as anti-business. But we don’t require them to have a change of heart, in the same way workers won’t stop asking for fair share in the social wealth they have been creating for centuries. 

 

Why then is legislative action necessary for wage hikes? Simply put, the regionalization of wages under RA6727 was an epic failure. The highest wage rates, 35 years after, still fall short of meeting the poverty threshold. Moreover, regional wage policies have not succeeded in attracting investments to the country's poorer regions, despite being one of the law's intended objectives. There is also a low level of investment despite this low wage regime incentives.

 

We understand ECOP's emphasis on micro-enterprises as a central argument against wage hikes. However, framing the issue as a choice between inflation, unemployment, and small businesses overlooks the broader benefits of ensuring workers receive fair compensation. We maintain that our call for legislated wage hikes is not intended to harm small businesses; rather, we believe that the positive ripple effects of higher take-home pay extend further than keeping wages at starvation levels.

27 February 2024

Thursday, February 22, 2024

Social movements march against chacha, link up with church groups


Labor organizations and social movements on Thursday participated in the ecumenical gathering “PANAGHOY, PANALANGIN AT PANININDIGAN LABAN SA CHARTER CHANGE” event led by the Koalisyon Laban sa Chacha held at Plaza Roma, directly in front of the Manila Cathedral and the Commission on Elections office.

 

But before converging at Plaza Roma, sectoral and community groups gathered from eight in the morning at the Missionary Charity beside the Delpan Sports Complex in Tondo and marched towards Anda Circle to link up with other contingents.

 

Carrying the banner "Sahod Itaas, Cha-Cha Iatras" were the Federation of Free Workers (FFW), Partido Manggagawa (PM), and Sentro ng Nagkakaisa at Progresibong Manggagawa (SENTRO), all conveners of the NAGKAISA! Labor Coalition. Meanwhile, KALIPUNAN is comprised of groups Alyansa Tigil Mina (ATM), Kilos Maralita (KM), PAKISAMA, PM, SENTRO, and World March of Women.

 

Also joining the march were the Akbayan party, the human rights group In Defense of Human Rights and Dignity Movement or iDefend, Tindig Pilipinas, UPAC and DAMPA.

 

Urban poor residents from Parola and Baseco in Tondo, particularly those from Isla Puting Bato and Slip 0, called on the government to prioritize and fund housing programs for the poor instead of pushing for chacha which offers land ownership to foreign citizens. Women and youth participants also voiced their demands for wider social services and the eradication of violence.

 

In their related statements, the groups asserted that the Constitution is not the reason why many Filipinos remain poor. They argued that the real problem lies in the concentration of wealth in a few hands and the dynastic governance of the country's leaders.

 

They also claimed that charter change was never the people’s urgent concerns such as inflation, wage hike and unemployment, hence there is no reason for lawmakers to prioritize it.

 

The Koalisyon Laban sa Chacha is a coalition of church, sectors, and community groups launched on February 14 to oppose charter change while simultaneously advocating for the people's demands, deepening democracy, and good governance.

 

Following the mass, the coalition conducted their program including sectoral speeches, during which they called on the Comelec to completely halt the people’s initiative. Part of the action also included commemorating the People Power that began on February 22, 1986.

 

They vowed to continue opposing cha-cha until the people’s initiative and even the convening of ConAss for economic charter change are completely stopped. 

Photos and videos can be accessed at https://www.facebook.com/partidomanggagawa/


NAGKAISA! Labor Coalition

Kalipunan ng mga Kilusang Masa (KALIPUNAN)

February 22, 2024

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

House must now deliberate on wage hike as Senate passes P100 version—Partido Manggagawa


The group Partido Manggagawa (PM) stated that the Senate approval of the P100 legislated wage hike is a welcome relief. “We will wait for the House of Representatives if they can walk their counterpart bills which are higher than the Senate’s. Huwag sanang ang grasya ay maging bato pa kung aatras ang Kamara. Magagalit ang manggagawa. The battle now shifts to Batasan,” declared Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and a Marikina City councilor.

 

The group also asserted that all workers, formal and informal, will gain whether directly or indirectly from the legislated wage hike, contrary to the claims of the Employers Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP) that only 10% of “formal workers” will benefit.

 

“Minimum wage earners will get the P100 wage hike in full. Other workers in the formal sector will gain a portion of P100 through what is called wage distortion—wages above the minimum will have to be adjusted since the floor was raised. And workers in the informal economy will also benefit since formal workers with more purchasing power will patronize their products and services. It is ordinary wage earners—not rich professionals or capitalists—who buy from street vendors, eat in carinderias, ride jeepneys and tricycles, and purchase farmers’ and fishers’ produce in wet markets. In fact, formal and informal workers live together as one family so how can they not enjoy the wage hike?,” Magtubo.

 

He lambasted Sergio Ortiz-Luis of ECOP “for feigning concern for workers when in truth he just doesn’t want profits reduced through a wage hike.”


“Ortiz-Luis is peddling fake news. Let us be evidence-based with the numbers. The latest Labor Force Survey shows that 49.2%, about half, of the total 50.5 million labor force, are 24.8 million workers employed in private firms. Of which, one fifth or 4.1 million are minimum wage earners. Another 13.8 million workers, about a quarter or 27.4% of the labor force, are self-employed with no employees. Majority of them are informal workers like street vendors and tricycle drivers while a minority are middle-class professionals like doctors and lawyers. Therefore, three quarters of the labor force or more than 30 million workers stand to benefit from a wage hike. Ortiz-Luis is being disingenuous as he is actually defending the interests of the one million employers or 2% of the labor force,” Magtubo expounded.

 

He added that “In fact, even employers will in the end take advantage of a wage hike as aggregate demand in the economy will rise. Workers’ wages are entirely consumed to buy their families’ necessities, unlike capitalists who hoard part of their profits as savings or use it to obtain luxuries from abroad. This is what happened for the past two years: the economy prospered, and inflation and unemployment went on a decline after two successive minimum wage hikes in all regions. Wage hikes are good, not bad, for the economy and all workers.” 


Monday, February 19, 2024

STATEMENT ON SENATE APPROVAL OF P100 WAGE HIKE

 

The Senate approval of the P100 wage hike is a welcome relief. We will wait for the House of Representatives if they can walk their counterpart bills which are higher than the Senate’s.

 

Huwag sanang ang grasya ay maging bato pa kung aatras ang Kamara. Magagalit ang manggagawa.

 

The battle now shifts to Batasan.

19 February 2024

Wage Earners and Aleng Nena Share Economic Benefit from Higher Wages – Partido Manggagawa

 


Unlike in business where income is retained by employers either as capital for reinvestment or as profit to sustain lavish lifestyles, workers' wages circulate directly into the local economy, bolstering the income of neighborhood stores as noted in a recent report published in a leading newspaper.

 

This is according to Partido Manggagawa (PM) which, together with the Nagkaisa! Labor Coalition, continues to press for the passage of the P100 and higher wage hike bills in both Houses of Congress despite permanent opposition from the Employers Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP).

 

Today the Senate is poised to pass the P100 increase in minimum wage on third and final reading, while the Lower House has yet to act on the pending P150 and P750 wage hike for workers in the private sector, as well as the P33,000 entry level monthly salary for public sector workers.

 

The more than P8-B sales generated by neighborhood sari-sari stores in 2023, as reported by analytics group Packworks, “reinforces our claim that a uniform increase in national minimum wage would neither kill micro enterprises nor lead to massive unemployment,” said PM Chair Renato Magtubo.

 

This report, he added, also disproves ECOP’s ‘catastrophe’ scenario for small businesses once minimum wages are increased by P100, or higher. “To the contrary, Packworks’ analytic research pointed to escalating sales transactions between neighborhoods from 2022-2023, coinciding with slight adjustments in minimum wages ordered by the regional wage boards during that time,” Magtubo said.

 

The report also found no correlation between inflation and the sales trend in sari-sari stores, belying further ECOP’s sensational ‘wage hike = high inflation’ economic blackmail. Inflation slid down to 2.8% in January 2024 from 8.7% in January 2023 based on official statistics reported by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA).

 

Considering this positive trend, Magtubo anticipates further boost in sales transactions for Aleng Nenas from significant wage increases, citing an earlier study showing that 94% of consumers rely heavily on neighborhood stores for their retail needs. With approximately 1.3 million sari-sari stores nationwide, 75% of which are owned by women, these establishments play a crucial role in sustaining local economies.

 

Drawing from his experience as a former union president, Magtubo underscores the symbiotic relationship between workers and sari-sari stores. He notes, "Workers often rely on 'utang-bayad-utang-bayad' transactions with their Aleng Nenas. Thus, their capacity to pay and buy more directly impacts on the viability and sustainability of neighborhood stores."

 

In effect, elaborates Magtubo, “Absent regular support from the government, it is more evident that the transfer of income from wages of formal labor is what sustains the sari-sari stores, and consequently, Aleng Nena’s self-employment in the informal economy.”

 

Magtubo concludes by affirming the labor movement's stance that legislated wage hikes of P100 or higher are not only justified but also beneficial to the national economy. He calls for an end to fear-mongering tactics employed by the Employers Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP).

19 February 2024

Sunday, February 18, 2024

All workers will benefit from a wage hike—Partido Manggagawa

 


Contrary to the claims of the Employers Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP) that only 10% of “formal workers” will benefit from the P100 wage hike bill pending at the Senate, the group Partido Manggagawa (PM) asserted that all workers, formal and informal, will gain whether directly or indirectly.

 

“Minimum wage earners will get the P100 wage hike in full. Other workers in the formal sector will gain a portion of P100 through what is called wage distortion—wages above the minimum will have to be adjusted since the floor was raised. And workers in the informal economy will also benefit since formal workers with more purchasing power will patronize their products and services. It is ordinary wage earners—not rich professionals or capitalists—who buy from street vendors, eat in carinderias, ride jeepneys and tricycles, and purchase farmers’ and fishers’ produce in wet markets. In fact, formal and informal workers live together as one family so how can they not enjoy the wage hike?,” explained Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and a Marikina City councilor.

 

He lambasted Sergio Ortiz-Luis of ECOP “for feigning concern for workers when in truth he just doesn’t want profits reduced through a wage hike.”

 

“Ortiz-Luis is peddling fake news. Let us be evidence-based with the numbers. The latest Labor Force Survey shows that 49.2%, about half, of the total 50.5 million labor force, are 24.8 million workers employed in private firms. Of which, one fifth or 4.1 million are minimum wage earners. Another 13.8 million workers, about a quarter or 27.4% of the labor force, are self-employed with no employees. Majority of them are informal workers like street vendors and tricycle drivers while a minority are middle-class professionals like doctors and lawyers. Therefore, three quarters of the labor force or more than 30 million workers stand to benefit from a wage hike. Ortiz-Luis is being disingenuous as he is actually defending the interests of the one million employers or 2% of the labor force,” Magtubo expounded.

 

He added that “In fact, even employers will in the end take advantage of a wage hike as aggregate demand in the economy will rise. Workers’ wages are entirely consumed to buy their families’ necessities, unlike capitalists who hoard part of their profits as savings or use it to obtain luxuries from abroad. This is what happened for the past two years: the economy prospered, and inflation and unemployment went on a decline after two successive minimum wage hikes in all regions, except Davao Region in 2023. Wage hikes are good, not bad, for the economy and all workers.” 

February 18, 2024

Friday, February 16, 2024

P100 wage hike will be a blessing not catastrophe

 

The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) countered employers’ doomsday scenarios for the economy once a legislated wage hike is passed. “A P100 wage hike will be a blessing not a catastrophe for the economy. For the past two years, minimum wages were raised in all regions, except BARMM for this round, and yet inflation and unemployment went on a decline. The economy benefited and did not suffer from salary increases,” argued Rene Magtubo, PM national chair.

 

The group welcomes the proposed P100 increase in minimum wages nationwide which the Senate will deliberate on third reading on Monday. “We would have wanted it to be higher and across-the-board but still an additional P100 in workers’ pockets will be an immediate relief as the cost of living is around P1,200 a day,” Magtubo stated.

 

PM is calling on the House of Representatives Labor Committee to deliberate on the pending wage bills. “As surveys have repeatedly shown, Filipinos want solutions to high prices and low wages, not amendments to the Constitution. Let’s get to work,” Magtubo demanded.

 

He added that “ECOP head Sergio Ortiz-Luis is singing an old tune. They cried the same dire predictions in 2022 and again in 2023 when organized labor demanded wage hikes. Inflation in 2022 was 5.8% but now it is down to 2.8%. Similarly, unemployment has decreased from 5.4% in 2022 to 3.1% as of December last year.”

 

“In Metro Manila, the minimum wage hike in 2022 and 2023 was P33 and P40, respectively, or P73 in total. Firms did not shutter and MSMEs did not go under. Where is the catastrophe? On the contrary, the economy has gained from wage hikes as the increased purchasing power meant greater demand and bigger production for firms in industry and services,” Magtubo explained.

 

He continued that “As theory and studies show, a moderate salary raise need not lead to inflation or retrenchment as employers can just absorb the higher labor costs by reducing their profit. So, we call on Sergio Ortiz-Luis, share the wealth with the workers who created it in the first place.” 

February 16, 2024

 

Thursday, February 15, 2024

Nagkaisa! Presses the Lower House to Raise Wages Higher than What the Senate Could

 

With the Senate getting closer to passing on third reading the proposed P100 wage increase, the Nagkaisa! Labor Coalition now calls on the House of Representatives (HOR) to get their own version of the bill moving and raise wages higher than what the Senate could.

 

Pending before the HOR are bills seeking a P150 and P750 across-the-board wage hikes for private sector workers, and P33,000/month entry level for public sector workers. Today, a bill was also filed for a P50,000 salary base for teachers.

 

If the HOR can create a mountain out of a molehill, like what it did for a more complicated process of revising the Constitution, then they can do the same for the wage hike bills and in correcting the defective wage setting mechanism in the country.

 

The P100 wage proposal which passed the second reading in the Senate today falls short of the P150 originally promised and a far cry from what was needed to save minimum wage earners from the poverty wages imposed upon them by all the regional wage boards.  The measure is also for minimum wage earners only.

 

Still, we welcome it as a form of relief, and a good start as well to correcting the problems created by the regional wage setting mechanism. Once legislated, this should be followed by reforming the wage setting mechanism, which both the House and the Senate should initiate, rather than waste their time on charter change. 

NAGKAISA! Labor Coalition

15 February 2024

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Advance basic sectors’ agenda, not charter change for the rich and foreign capital


 

Members of the NAGKAISA! Labor Coalition staged another protest in front of the Senate on the eve of Valentine's Day against charter change (chacha), simultaneous with the Senate's ongoing investigation into reported anomalies in the gathering of signatures for the people’s initiative (PI) to amend the Constitution.

 

Joined by Kalipunan ng mga Kilusang Masa (KALIPUNAN), the two groups urged the Senate and the House of Representatives to prioritize the immediate needs of the working people, such as increasing workers' wages, lowering the prices of goods, jobs crisis, combating poverty and violence, including those against women, and addressing the climate crisis, which is the biggest global problem today.

 

“Ang dapat pusuan ng mga mambabatas ay wage hike at pagkamit sa living wage, hindi ang chacha para sa mayaman at dayuhan," said Partido Manggagawa (PM) Secretary General Judy Ann Miranda, challenging the Senate to finally pass the proposed P100 wage hike bill, which was already reported in plenary by Committee on Labor Chair Sen. Jinggoy Estrada last week.

 

Miranda emphasized that the same should be done in the House of Representatives, where bills proposing P150, P750 and P33,000/month for public sector workers wage hikes as well as the abolition of regional wage boards are pending, instead of leading a fake people’s initiative.

 

Furthermore, creating green and climate jobs to address chronic unemployment and climate crisis is a new social imperative that Congress needs to decisively address, said Miranda.

 

Meanwhile, Josua Mata, one of the conveners of NAGKAISA! and Secretary General of the Sentro ng Nagkakaisa at Progresibong Manggagawa (SENTRO), stated that even the ongoing Senate hearings on economic charter change not only consume time but also divert attention from the real problems of the masses because the blame is placed on the Constitution rather than on the unequal distribution of wealth and dynastic governance in our country.

 

"The Constitution did not hinder us from developing our own industries. But we don't even have an industrial policy. In fact, foreign interest prevented us from doing so through the dictates of the IMF-WB and WTO for liberalization, deregulation, and privatization. But why are we blaming the Constitution now,” asked Mata to the proponents of economic charter change.

 

Mata also warned that opening up charter change in many ways could also lead to disregarding its provision prohibiting the entry of nuclear arms into the country, especially when the same is not strictly enforced in the case of the entry of US military hardware into the country.

 

This is a reaction to reports that the Philippines is expecting the arrival of nuclear-capable BraHmos supersonic missiles imported from India for P21 billion. "Is there a plan for the Philippines to become a nuclear power while the majority of Filipinos remain poor?"

Photos can be accessed at PM FB page: https://www.facebook.com/partidomanggagawa/posts/pfbid02Zi4mJTniMUU3EHTybNhUKHqFZv3EeZUs2fpK17pP7DNkq2QDLikFcVeMeHnDmzYNl

NAGKAISA! Labor Coalition

February 13, 2024

Saturday, February 10, 2024

Labor group slams Laguesma’s doomsday scenario


The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) slammed DOLE Secretary Bienvenido Laguesma for speculating that the P100 legislated wage hike will have an adverse impact on the economy, especially on small and medium enterprises.

 

“Labor Secretary Laguesma is singing the same old song with employers about economic difficulties once workers are granted a substantial wage hike. But they are singing out of tune as their doomsday scenario is refuted by economic indicators. Inflation and unemployment subsided since regional wages were increased in the latter half of 2023,” stated Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and Marikina city councilor.

 

PM welcomed the plenary deliberations in the Senate on the proposed P100 legislated wage hike bill. PM and other groups in Nagkaisa are returning to the Senate on Tuesday for a bigger action to demand the passage of the proposed nationwide salary increase and also call for the scrapping of the charter change proposal.

 

According to latest figures from the Philippine Statistics Authority, headline inflation as of January 2024 is at a very low 2.8%, much reduced from the 4.7% in July 2023, when the NCR wage board ordered a P40 minimum wage hike. Inflation for year 2022 was 5.8%. Meanwhile unemployment is at 3.1% as of December 2023, down from 4.8% in July 2023. In 2022, annual unemployment was at 5.4%.

 

After the NCR wage board issued an order, other regional boards successively granted minimum wage increases in the succeeding months of 2023 and up to January this year.

 

“Workers in all regions got minimum wage hikes in 2022. Further, all regional wage boards, except the one in BARMM, issued wage orders in 2023. In all that time, inflation and unemployment went on a secular decline in opposition to the dire predictions of employers and the DOLE,” Magtubo explained.

 

He added that “We call on the Senate and the House not to be blackmailed by the apocalyptic forecasts of enemies of the working class.”

 

PM has been advocating for “Chicha not chacha” in the face of the trapo-driven people’s initiative and the proposed Resolution of Both Houses 6. The group argues that the pro-worker and social justice provisions of the Constitution must be enforced. PM opposes amending the Constitution to pave the way for more foreign control of the economy and greater trapo domination of politics.

February 10, 2024

Monday, May 8, 2023

Make the happy bills happen now—labor group on legislated wage hike

Photo from Vera Files


The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) welcomed the announcement of Senate President Juan Miguel Zubiri that they will facilitate the passage of a legislated across-the-board P150 salary hike but also called on the House of Representatives to fast-track its counterpart bill.

 

A P150 across-the-board wage hike is indeed a happy bill since it will uplift workers' lives and not just because it is a pet advocacy of legislators. Make the happy bills happen now!,” stated Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and a Marikina city councilor.

 

“We could not agree more with Senator Zubiri that private sector minimum wages have been eroded by inflation and are less than half the Constitutionally-mandated living wage. Thus, the imperative for immediate relief for workers through a legislated wage hike which Congress has the power to enact. Workers are suffering from starvation wages. Instead of a living wage, workers are paid a libing wage,” Magtubo explained.

 

Using the latest consumer price index data from the Philippine Statistics Authority, the group calculates that P88 has been eroded from the P570 minimum wages of Metro Manila workers as of the January inflation of 8.7%. Inflation in areas outside of the National Capital Region is even higher. However, the cost of living for a family of five is estimated by PM to be around P1,300 per day.

 

“The labor movement must link up arms to win war, that is to fight for a wage increase for wage recovery. The working class needs champions in and out of Congress but only unity and action of workers can defeat the resistance of employers to a wage hike,” Magtubo asserted.

 

PM also asked Senator Zubiri to consider the long-standing demand for the abolition of the regional wage boards which discriminate against workers outside Metro Manila. “Instead, we demand a National Wage Commission with the power to adjust wages on the basis of price increases and productivity growth. Even before the recent inflation, wages have stagnated amidst a decade and half of 50% rise in labor productivity. This means that employers have monopolized economic growth and workers have been left behind,” Magtubo elaborated.

 

He added that “Further, we are proposing a policy package called Apat na Dapat. First, wage hikes. Second, abolition of regressive taxes like VAT and application of progressive taxation such as a wealth tax on oligarchs and billionaires. Third, social security subsidies for informal workers. Fourth, discounts on basic commodities. These will protect and improve the wages and incomes of workers in the formal and informal economy.” 

 Press Release

Partido Manggagawa

May 8, 2023