Press Release
September 7, 2013
The militant Partido ng
Manggagawa (PM) slammed the P10 wage hike in the National Capital Region (NCR) as
a “cruel Napoles joke” inflicted on the workers. “Janet Napoles steals P10
billion from the people’s money and the government offers P10 in coins to
workers as a consolation. While the people’s attention is focused on the billion
peso pork barrel scam, the wage board thinks it can quietly dupe workers with a
measly pay increase,” insisted Wilson Fortaleza, PM’s spokesperson.
Meanwhile PM called on the
Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) which had filed a P83
across-the-board wage petition to coordinate with other labor groups to protest
the NCR wage board’s decision and launch a joint campaign for a living wage. “The
TUCP’s rejection of the wage board’s decision is a good initial move. The next
step should be to complement the TUCP’s appeal to the wage board with a call on
workers to hold mass actions. If the middle class finds it necessary to call a Million
People March for the abolition of the pork barrel, it is imperative on the
working class to launch a mass movement to end the cheap labor policy,” Fortaleza argued.
He added that the P10 wage
hike is a “dagdag-bawi scam.” “Government decides to give workers a P10 hike in
wages but it will take it back with the proposed P10 increase in fares for the MRT
and LRT. Further, prices of basic goods like rice have inflated so that in the
end, workers are worse off than before,” Fortaleza
explained.
“PM’s own study reveals that the cost of living in
the NCR is already P1,200 as of April this year for a family of six and yet the
new minimum wage adds up to only
P466, which will not even buy half of the basket of goods and services,” Fortaleza said.
He continued that “This is
the ugly reality of inequality in our country. The Philippines
is the fastest growing economy in Asia yet
only a few, the capitalist class, is benefiting from the increased wealth created
by the working people. The assets of the ten richest Filipinos amount to some US$45
billion, which is equivalent to the yearly wages of 20 million minimum wage
earners.”
PM contends that the wage boards have
outlived their usefulness and should be replaced by a Wage Commission. Fortaleza stated that “The mandate of the National Wage
Commission will be to fix wages based on the single criterion of cost of
living. This is different from the wage
boards which are bogged down by convoluted and contradictory 10-point criteria
in fixing wages. The Wage
Commission should raise the minimum wage
to the level of the living wage
by a mix of mechanisms such as direct pay
increases, tax exemptions, price discounts and social security subsidies for
workers.”
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