Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Labor yearender: Incomes and jobs crisis pummeled workers in 2022

 

Despite the economy sustaining its recovery from the recession induced by the pandemic, workers nonetheless faced a worsening incomes and jobs crisis in 2022. Thus, while small businesses were slowly recuperating, formal and informal workers continued bleeding from wage and income erosion, job losses, and a fall in employment quality.

 

Inflation ratcheted up for the whole year, from 3.0% in January 2022 to 8.0% in November. No doubt prices rose even more in December. By October 2022, the 7.7% inflation had cut P76 off the P570 minimum wage of workers in Metro Manila since the latest wage order was implemented on June 4, 2022. This meant that the P33 minimum wage increase in June had effectively been eradicated by year’s end and further that workers were owed more. Inflation was even worse outside Metro Manila. This led to the clamor from the labor movement by the last quarter of 2022 for a new salary hike.

 

Partido ng Manggagawa called for a P100 nationwide across-the-board legislated increase while the labor group Kapatiran ng mga Unyon at Samahang Manggagawa filed a petition for a P100 minimum wage hike in the NCR wage hike early this month. The Employers Confederation of the Philippines opposed a wage hike using the disingenuous argument that MSMEs cannot afford it. Despite runaway inflation, the government played deaf to the demand and stuck to the myth that there was no supervening condition that existed to warrant a new round of wage hikes.

 

The government trumpeted the return of employment figures to pre-pandemic levels. By October 2022, unemployment was at 4.5%, exactly the same rate as in October 2019 before COVID-19 struck. But while the quantity of jobs may have returned, the quality of jobs worsened. More people were working part-time instead of full-time. Underemployment—or the people wanting more hours of work—jumped from 13.0% in October 2019 or 5.62 million Filipinos to 14.2% in October 2022 or 6.67 million. This translates to more than a million Filipinos working as casual, contractual or informal in 2022 or a rise of 19% compared to pre-pandemic levels of underemployment.

 

As part-time employees working as casual, contractual or informal, they would be suffering from lower remuneration, not enough benefits, less job security, lack of social security and unsafe working conditions. In other words, these employed but vulnerable workers in the post-pandemic context are still harmed by decent work deficits. More Filipinos are back to work but in bad jobs.

 

A reflection of this phenomenon is revealed in the plight of delivery riders. No doubt, there were more of them as essential workers during the pandemic. But an upsurge of protests among delivery riders express the decent work deficits of Filipinos working as independent contractors rather than as full-time regular employees. Almost all of these protests originated from grievances over steep declines in incomes as app arbitrarily cut their “commissions” while the cost of fuel rose continuously. This contradiction exposes the risks of app-based work where part of the business costs has been passed on to so-called freelancers while platforms continue to exercise control over their work. This year, Grab riders in General Santos, Cebu and Pampanga, together with Grab cyclists in Metro Manila, all held mass actions to highlight their demands. In a pioneering initiative, the Iloilo Grab Riders Union was formed in November, which will test the employee-employment relationship between workers and the apps.

 

While the unemployment may have been to normal—which is not saying much—the hemorrhage of jobs continues. In September 2022, some 4,000 workers across the five factories of the Sports City group of companies in the Mactan Economic Zone were laid off, arguably the biggest mass termination this year. That the mother of all layoffs at Sports City was not a one-time, big-time event was confirmed by the industry association CONWEP which stated in October 2022 that up to 4% of the 270,000 apparel workers have been laid off this year.

 

Workers in export zones such as garment and electronics are especially at risk due to global supply chain disruptions. With the threat of a government dipping its fingers on their pension funds and prospects of a global recession ever higher, Filipino workers should brace for bad rather than good tidings next year.

Partido Manggagawa

December 27, 2022

Sunday, December 11, 2022

MEDIA ADVISORY: Youth-led art and creative activities today for human rights

MEDIA ADVISORY

Partido Manggagawa

11 December 2022

 

REQUEST FOR COVERAGE

As continuation of Human Rights Day celebration, Partido Manggagawa-Kabataan, Tara Kabataan, together with Dakila gather for:

 

SINING PARA SA KABATAAN, KABABAIHAN, KAPAYAPAAN

 

WHEN: Today, December 11, 2022

WHERE: Plaza Hugo, Santa Ana, Manila

TIME: 9:00 AM – 2:00 PM

 

Photo/video opportunity:

Artworks on human rights issues, women, and peace.

 

For more info, you may contact: Judy Miranda @ 09175570777

Saturday, December 10, 2022

Living wage, freedom of association asserted on celebration of Human Rights Day

 


Demand for living wage and freedom of association highlight workers’ participation in the Human Rights Day protest held in Manila, Saturday.

 

The Partido Manggawa (PM), said 74 years after the International Declaration of Human Rights and yet living a life of dignity and improvements in peoples’ standard of living that were desired under that declaration remain wanting.

 

“This is because in many states, including the Philippines, these aspirations remain a scrap of paper. And with civil and political rights, including the right to form unions, to bargain and even to strike are highly constrained, achieving living wage and rising standard of living as provided under the Constitution were never achieved,” said PM Secretary General Judy Miranda.

 

PM Joined the human rights community led by PAHRA and iDEFEND in a caravan and march to Mendiola this morning.

 

Miranda lamented that without a Labor Agenda to stand with, the Marcos administration will just be another sad episode in the country’s lack of compliance to international commitments on human rights.

 

Living wage, according to Miranda, “is the only way to achieve a golden age as the current poverty wages consigned workers to poverty even if their productivity has increased many folds during the last three decades.”

 

PM accompanied the Kapatiran ng mga Unyon at Samahang Manggagawa (KAPATIRAN) last Monday in filing a P100 wage increase for wage recovery (WinWar) petition at the NCR Regional Wage Board. Similar petitions will be filed in other regions in the next few days as inflation continues to soar.

 

PM also wants Congress to abolish the regional wage boards in favor of a national wage commission to reform the country’s wage fixing mechanisms that fail to bring wages nearer the living wage as mandated by the Constitution.

 

“The Maharlika bill should be scrapped in favor of the workers agenda such as wage hikes and wage reforms, ending endo, and the creation of strong public employment programs,” referring to the controversial Maharlika Investment Fund (MIF) that Congress is pushing, said Miranda.

 

The group said the sovereign wealth fund can only be sustained by wealth tax as the public sector runs on deficit and the real surplus is at the hands of the wealthiest businessmen.


Photos of the December 10 Human Rights Celebration can be accessed here: https://www.facebook.com/partidomanggagawa/posts/pfbid02LoqtmQCgWeYDQ4bq1ihGfRhpBYAiHCMwEmAEpEfxi8Q1tJzEu7AWPhPyNhSgJMoJl

Partido Manggagawa

10 December 2022

Thursday, December 8, 2022

Partido Manggagawa welcomes SSS and GSIS exclusion from MIF, seeks GFI’s accountability


The Partido Manggagawa (PM) welcomes the decision of the House panel to spare SSS and GSIS from Maharlika’s sources of fund.

But the group maintains that the decision does not absolve Congress as well as the executives of the two pension funds from accountability.  

PM said members’ vigilance and strong opposition were key for this reversal, and thus, should be sustained to prevent future attempts at misappropriating workers’ funds.

“The mere fact that Congress toyed with the idea of creating a wealth fund out of our pension funds is already a red flag. But more reprehensible was the reckless approval of the SSS and GSIS executives to divert funds into the MIF without consulting the fund owners – the Filipino working class,” said PM Secretary General.

To prevent a repeat of this attempt for fund diversion, the group proposes that a mechanism for consultation - in the minimum regular dialogue with labor groups and in the maximum, a referendum for members - be instituted in the SSS and GSIS manual or system of operations.

Miranda explained that fund members were truly disgusted with SSS’ decision because an 11-15% increase in premiums was imposed beginning 2018 on the pretexts that the fund’s life was deteriorating, and members’ benefits need to be enhanced.  

Women workers expressed this reservation as Miranda recalled, during the public hearings on the 105-Day Expanded Maternity Leave, the SSS claimed the EML can only be funded by an increase in premiums. “But now we’ve got a surplus for Maharlika,” lamented Miranda.

Earlier, the Nagkaisa Labor coalition where PM is affiliated, countered that a wealth tax is the better source of the sovereign wealth fund (SWF) as they are a real surplus from labor’s productivity that remains concentrated at the hands of wealthy businessmen.

Partido Manggagawa

08 December 2022

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Untamed inflation warrants immediate pay hike – Partido Manggagawa

 

                                                    

With November inflation escalating to 8.0%, the Partido Manggagawa (PM), on Tuesday, reiterated its demand for an immediate wage hike to restore lost purchasing power of workers.

 

A P100 “wage increase for wage recovery” petition was filed yesterday by the Kapatiran ng mga Unyon at Samahang Manggagawa (Kapatiran) and PM before the NCR Wage Board.

 

A wage hike, together with reforms in the country’s wage rationalization law, were part of the 5-Point Labor Agenda being pushed by Nagkaisa, a coalition to which PM is affiliated. Other agenda include, public employment program, an end to endo and trade union repression both in the private and public sector, and mechanisms for continuing dialogue to discuss industry and structural reforms. 

 

“Without an immediate pay hike, workers are left to shoulder the impacts of rising cost of living while Congress and economic managers spend their time pooling funds, including pension funds of workers, to invest in the Maharlika Investment Fund,” said PM Chair Renato Magtubo.

 

Further, added Magtubo, “without reforms in the wage fixing mechanisms, poverty wages shall be confined to where they are during the last three decades – at starvation levels.”

 

PM supports the Kapatiran petition for a wage hike and argued firmly that even without runaway inflation, workers deserve a fair share from economic growth and rising productivity.

 

“GDP and labor productivity were on the rise during the last three decades, yet real wages remained flat. So, we really don’t understand why proponents of Maharlika in Congress never thought of providing workers wealth transfers (i.e., wealth tax) and rather trained their guns at how employee pension funds can be converted into capital,” lamented Magtubo.

 

PM likewise dismisses the Employers Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP) main argument against the wage hike petition.

 

“ECOP says only 10% of workers will benefit from a wage hike as registered enterprises are 90% MSMEs. Yet the truth is, big companies also benefit from low minimum wage by way of endo or contractualization,” asserted Magtubo.

 

The labor group said thousands of agency workers deployed in medium and large companies are paid the basic minimum wage and that is the main reason why ECOP vehemently rejects any attempt to end endo.

Partido Manggagawa

6 December 2022


Monday, December 5, 2022

Workers file P100 wage hike petition before NCR Wage Board

NCR Wage hike petition filed by Kapatiran

 

Citing the existence of urgent and reasonable grounds, the Kapatiran ng mga Unyon at Samahang Manggagawa or KAPATIRAN, on Monday, filed an instant petition for a P100 wage increase before the NCR Wage Board.

 

KAPATIRAN, a labor organization duly registered with the Department of Labor and Employment, was represented by its Chairperson Rey Almendras. He was accompanied by fellow officials of KAPATIRAN and Partido Manggagawa (PM) Chair Renato Magtubo.

 

A brief picket-rally was also held outside the NCR Wage Board offices in Manila, to press the wage body to act on KAPATIRAN’s petition despite the one-year ban as untamed inflation continues to erode the value of wages.

 

Almendras, also the President of Philip Morris Fortune Tobacco Corporation Labor Union, stated that their petition was initiated on behalf of all minimum wage earners in agricultural and non-agricultural sector, retail/trade and in manufacturing sectors in the National Capital Region, whose real wages were greatly diminished by soaring inflation and which nominal amounts remain at starvation level during the past three decades.

 

“The petition to increase the minimum wage stems from the need of the minimum wage earners to recover lost value of their wages, cope with rising cost of living, and afford a dignified life as a common worker,” said Almendras.

 

KAPATIRAN is pressing the NCR Wage Board to come up with a new Wage Order as the inflation rate increased rapidly within months in 2022 – from 2.5% in October 2021 to 7.7% by October 2022. And just before the actual filing of the wage hike petition, news came out of the inflation rate accelerating further to 8.2% in November.

 

The group said the current minimum wage rate of Php 570.00 in NCR would only amount to P11,400.00 monthly income for a laborer who works five days a week. “This is not enough to keep up with the average expenses in their income class,” lamented KAPATIRAN, since as of last year, a household needs at least P12,030 to survive the poverty threshold, according to PSA.

 

“Evidently, minimum wages fall below this poverty threshold and way too far from achieving living wage as provided under the Constitution. The present NCR rate, in fact, constitutes a measly 10% of the Filipinos’ dream for a ‘simple and comfortable life’ defined by NEDA in 2015,” stated KAPATIRAN in the petition.

 

PM Chair, Renato Magtubo, asserted the P100 wage recovery demand as just as it fairly aims to recover lost value of wages that minimum wage earners had prior to inflation.

 

“We in the Nagkaisa Labor Coalition have another track to pursue in rectifying decades of injustice done to workers by RA 6727 or the Wage Rationalization Act. We want this law repealed and replaced by a new law whose mechanisms truly ensure the realization of the living wage  guaranteed by the Constitution,” said Magtubo. 

 

He added that rather than push for the controversial “Maharlika Fund” that would drain off workers’ pension funds in SSS and GSIS, Congress should provide workers “Mahalaga” legislations such nationwide wage increases and reforming the country’s wage fixing mechanism that confined wages to starvation levels.

 

Demand for wage increases and living wage were part of the 5-Point Labor Agenda being pushed by Nagkaisa and United Labor as the basis for engaging Marcos, Jr. Nagkaisa denounced the lack of labor agenda in the Marcos administration through marches and “Blank Paper” protests during the commemoration of Bonifacio Day. 

KAPATIRAN

05 December 2022

Sunday, December 4, 2022

Media Advisory: Workers group to file P100 wage hike at NCR wage board

December 4, 2022

 

MEDIA ADVISORY

Request for coverage

 

 

The Kapatiran ng mga Unyon at Samahang Manggagawa will lead the filing of a P100 wage hike petition before the NCR Regional Wage Board. They will be joined by Partido Manggagawa (PM) which will be holding a picket outside the NWPC-NCR offices simultaneously with the filing.

 

          WHEN:     December 5, 2022

          TIME:        11:00 AM

          WHERE:   NCR Wage Board

Address:  DY Intl. Building, 1663 Malvar cor San Marcelino Sts. Manila,

 

Contact:

Rey Almendras

Kapatiran President

09480082350


Saturday, December 3, 2022

Nagkaisa statement on sovereign wealth fund


Wealth fund should come from wealth tax: 

Pera naming mga manggagawa yan, bakit kayo ang nag-uusap?

 

Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs) are essentially profit-driven state-owned investment funds. Some of our neighboring countries who want to make the most out of their surplus—usually foreign exchange generated from exports—established state-owned entities to invest their excess capital on various instruments. Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, among others, created their own SWFs.

 

With the potential of SWFs to grow, they can distort incentives in an economy where they are invested enough to favor specific economic activities and enterprises. Although SWFs usually invest in foreign instruments, there is nothing stopping them from pouring investments on profitable economic activities and enterprises at home, thus, making SWFs a strategic tool for industrial policy. But this is not necessarily the motivation for the proposed Maharlika Wealth Fund.

 

Now, should workers support the government’s attempt to create an SWF?

 

That public pension funds are identified as sources of financing for the SWF already earns the proposed fund minus points. Public pension funds are fragile. There is a reason both SSS and GSIS are very careful in their investment decisions and that is because that is how they secure future generations of Filipinos. GSIS should know the risks involved especially in foreign money market, after all, their exposure to the 2007-2008 Global Financial Crisis may have costed the pension fund some of its resources.

 

Can politicians pushing for SWF guarantee the security of workers’ retirement funds while exposing it to potential losses from profit-driven, speculative investment decisions? House representatives who back the SWF argue that pension funds are guaranteed by government funds anyway, and that the SWF will come with sufficient safeguard measures.

 

But NAGKAISA has a better idea to secure workers’ pensions, and that is by not exposing them to unnecessary risks. If SWF should be pursued, it must be funded by true surpluses generated by the economy—the proceeds from wealth tax!

 

In 2020, NAGKAISA floated the idea of taxing the unused assets of the wealthiest in the country. The tax revenue from the wealth tax could have funded pandemic recovery measures of the government. Now that the Philippines is gradually recovering, potential revenues from wealth tax can now be used to fund ideas such as SWF without risking workers’ funds.

 

And what is this obsession about the term “Maharlika”? If the proponents want to connect SWF to a concept from Philippine history, then they should have kept in mind that the Philippine government does not have a good record in managing public funds. That fact is also historical. Unless the proponents have concrete plans about protecting the SWF from turning into a Maharlika Wealth Scam, House Bill 6398 cannot just be allowed to pass. In any case, workers remain critical of this proposal especially when their pensions are on the line.

NAGKAISA Labor Coalition

03 December 2022

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Nagkaisa celebrates Bonifacio Day in ‘Blank Paper’ protest

 

A popular protest symbol against the zero covid policy and censorship in China found its way into the Philippines during the workers’ celebration of Andres Bonifacio’s 159th birthday.

 

The Nagkaisa Labor Coalition said the ‘Blank Paper’ protest is the Filipino workers’ adaptation of the symbolic protest to press for a Labor Agenda that the group finds sorely lacking in the Marcos administration.

 

“Bonifacio Day is always a day of protest for Filipino workers, but today is the first time that most of our placards bear no slogans. It is because the blank papers themselves convey the message that a labor agenda remains blank or missing under this new administration,” said Nagkaisa Chairman and Federation of Free Workers President Sonny Matula.

 

Nagkaisa staged the ‘Blank Paper’ and ‘die-in’ protest at Liwasang Bonifacio before joining the United Labor together with Kilusang Mayo Uno and Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino in a march to Mendiola.

 

Matula said workers want a Labor Agenda as a basis for continuing engagements with the government as the lack of it implies disregard if not outright neglect of labor in the face of soaring prices, deteriorating quality of jobs, and chronic unemployment problems, among others.

 

“Our proposed Labor Agenda embodies the workers’ most urgent concerns as well as reforms in labor policies to decisively address poverty, inequality, and injustice in the country,” stressed Matula.

 

The Nagkaisa Labor Agenda includes demands for a wage hike, public employment program, labor rights and an end to contractualization, affordable and quality public services, and mechanisms for a continuing policy dialogue on structural reforms.

 

Reiterating their call for a P100 wage hike, Partido Manggagawa Chair Renato Magtubo, stated: “The amount is merely to recover wages lost to inflation. It’s a relief for a minimum wage that remains at starvation level but still way too far from achieving living wages and improvements in workers’ standard of living as provided under the Constitution.”

 

On his part, Sentro ng Nagkakaisa at Progresibong Manggagawa (Sentro) Secretary General Josua Mata, attributed the prevailing regime of low wages to the unresolved problems of unemployment and contractualization.

 

“Contractualization, both in the private and public sector, significantly weakens the exercise of other labor rights such as freedom of association and collective bargaining, thus, keeping the life of ‘endo’ workers to the barest minimum,” explained Mata.

 

He added that without a robust public employment program in key sectors of the economy, including in climate and environment, the army of unemployed will just continue to crowd the market of cheap labor. 

 

Moreover, inadequacy and high cost of services aggravates this problem, said Public Services Labor Independent Confederation (PSLINK) leader Jillian Roque, who also warned that the Marcos administration’s massive rightsizing plan would only lead to further deterioration of public services.

 

In protecting labor rights, Nagkaisa demands a solid renunciation of the previous administration’s policy on extra-judicial killings, the scrapping of anti-union laws as well as the abolition of anti-union bodies involved in red-tagging like the NTF-ELCAC and the Joint Industrial Peace and Concern Office (JIPCO).

 

The coalition is likewise campaigning for the ratification and effective implementation of ILO Convention 190 to protect women from violence and harassment in the workplace.

NAGKAISA Labor Coalition

30 November 2022

Onward with Bonifacio’s Struggle for Freedom and “Kaginhawaan”


Bonifacio will always be relevant. At every juncture and for every generation, Bonifacio’s struggle for national independence and social justice will be reinterpreted by workers and the youth to understand the challenges of the situation.

 

Today, the Filipino people are caught between a new cold war between China and the US in the Pacific, and on a global scale between Western powers and rivals such as Russia and China. Filipino workers and youth must navigate a path of peace and independence from these geopolitical rivalries. Workers and the youth refuse to be the cannon fodder in the hot and cold wars of stronger countries.

 

Aside from the relevance of Bonifacio’s fight for independent development, his advocacy for social justice and “kaginhawaan” continues to ring true in the face of the consolidation of the authoritarian turn and growing inequality. The Philippines has one of the most unequal societies in Asia as revealed in a recent World Banks study. This inequality can only worsen as workers’ civil liberties and political rights are curtailed under a Marcos regime.

 

The struggle for freedom and “kaginhawaan” forms an integral whole as revealed in the current authoritarian regime of Marcos which has no program for workers. Thus, the advocacy for a labor agenda combining the demands for wages, jobs, rights and services intersects with the campaign to defend human rights and civil liberties.

 

We vow to pursue Bonifacio’s struggle under new conditions. Workers fight for wage hikes, secure jobs and labor rights to defend their living conditions. Further, workers resist the shrinking of the democratic space that denies them the ability to advance its advocacies for social justice and “kaginhawaan.”

Partido Manggagawa

30 November 2022

NAGKAISA to hold ‘Blank Paper’ Protest on Bonifacio Day

MEDIA ADVISORY

NAGKAISA Labor Coalition

30 November 2022

Contact:

Julius Cainglet 09178553279

Judy Miranda 09175570777


NAGKAISA to hold ‘Blank Paper’ Protest on Bonifacio Day

To highlight Marcos Jr.’s blank labor agenda

 

The NAGKAISA Labor Coalition is holding a ‘Blank Paper’ protest today, November 30, in commemoration of Andres Bonifacio’s 159th birthday. The aim is to press for a Labor Agenda that remains blank or absent in the Marcos administration.


WHEN: November 30, 2022

WHERE: Liwasang Bonifacio

TIME: 9:00 AM

 

The Labor Agenda includes demands for a wage hike, labor rights and an end to contractualization; affordable and quality public services; and mechanisms for a continuing policy dialogue on structural reforms.

 

The ‘Blank Paper’ protest is an adaptation of a popular protest symbol in China against the ‘zero covid’ policy and censorship. 

 

NAGKAISA is leading nationwide protests with workers' mobilizations in Cebu and Bacolod, and an indoor activity in Iloilo.  

 

NAGKAISA shall afterwards join the broad labor under United Labor together with Kilusang Mayo Uno and Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino in a march to Mendiola.

 

Photo opportunity:

 

Nagkaisa members holding blank papers in a ‘die-in’ protest. Posters and banners with specific demands are also available for photo ops.

Friday, November 25, 2022

Labor Groups vow to end VAW, call for ratification of Convention against violence at work

 


Some 500 workers led by the Nagkaisa! Labor Coalition marched ahead of the worldwide 18-Day Campaign to End Violence Against Women (VAW) at the University of the Philippines, Diliman as well as in Cebu and Bacolod, to call for an end to all forms of violence and for the ratification of ILO Convention 190 that addresses violence in the world of work.


Raising their banners, the women workers said: "We Vow to End VAW," as their collective commitment to pressure government ratification of ILO C.190 and a renewed culture of respect, safety and non-discrimination.


“Low wages, high prices, unemployment , and contractualization are vicious issues that plague Filipino women everyday. It is a form of economic violence which prevents women from living a life of dignity,” said Judy Miranda, head of the Nagkaisa! Women Committee (NWC), who led the labor sector’s protest action.


“We can only truly celebrate to End VAW when women have regular jobs, receive living wages, quality public services and are free from human rights violations and war atrocities,” added Miranda, who is also Partido Manggagawa Secretary General.


“We need to stop harassment and violence at work, particularly against women and girls,” said Atty. Sonny Matula, chairperson of Nagkaisa!


“We might not know it but many are suffering from such violence in our work premises, offices, schools and other places of work. We need to discover, expose and oppose it. There is no decent work if our fellow workers are suffering harassment and violence at work,” Matula added.


The loudest call of the predominantly women marchers is the ratification of ILO Convention 190 Concerning the Elimination of Violence and Harassment in the World of Work. Adopted in June 2019, ILO C. 190 is an assertion by the global community that violence and harassment in the world of work will not be tolerated and must end.


“Twenty-two countries have ratified the ILO C. 190. As one of the countries that supported its adoption, we in the Philippines should add our voices,” said Nice Coronacion, of the NWC.


“As we celebrate the International Day on the Elimination of All Forms of Violence Against Women, the ratification of ILO C. 190 will be one of our contributions in the fight to end all forms of injustice from domestic violence, rape, homophobia, sexual harassment, pornography, trafficking and prostitution,” added Coronacion, who is also Sentro Deputy Secretary General.


Public Services International (PSI) Philippine affiliates joined the national day of action for the ratification of ILO C. 190 to also start off the 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence in the Philippines.


“Public workers in the Philippines, around 60% of whom are women, continue to experience various forms of violence and harassment including physical abuse, verbal and emotional abuse, economic abuse, sexual harassment and other forms of gender-based violence. Exacerbating the situation are the attacks against union rights of public workers through union harassment and intimidation, red-tagging and unfair labor practices,” said Jillian Roque of the Public Services Labor Independent Confederation (PSLINK).

Ratifying C190 will strengthen protection of public workers regardless of their employment status including the growing number of informal and precarious workers in the public sector such as the job orders, contract of service and even our Barangay Health Workers.


It is alarming that more than 640,000 workers in government are denied their rights to fair wages, job security and social protection. This number does not even include the 260,000 Barangay Health Workers all over the country who are predominantly women and serve as our primary health care frontliners but are not even considered as employees.


Photos can be accessed here: https://www.facebook.com/partidomanggagawa/posts/pfbid05CNihboQ3LNMQe3678tdrfxBxCpGdixMwMS1qb1D4X3FWAWpqcLBuCWgxnBHYQKel


Nagkaisa! Labor Coalition Women’s Committee

25 November 2022

Tuesday, November 22, 2022

Workers won’t support war despite US assurance under MDT

Photo from Rappler

 

Filipino workers will never support any war even with the renewed assurance that the US will go side-by-side with the Philippines as provided under the Mutual Defense Treaty, said Partido Manggagawa (PM) in a statement, following US Vice President Kamala Harris’ meeting with President Marcos last Monday, November 21.

 

“We are for demilitarization and de-escalation of war threats in the West Philippine Sea and other regional flashpoints,” declared PM Chair Renato Magtubo, stating that the endless warmongerings between the two superpowers on WPS and Taiwan disputes do not serve the interest of the working people.

 

Magtubo argued that in every imperialist war, only foot soldiers and workers die in battle while the emperors and their generals partake with the booty. In the case of the Philippines, a war in the region is to the delight of giants whose agenda is global hegemony and control of trade routes.

 

“Hence, we call on governments of both the US and China to back off, demilitarize the oceans and let the peace-loving people of Asia enjoy genuine cooperation in the region,” said Magtubo.

 

The group asserts that rather than annihilation, war is better waged against poverty and inequality especially at a time the world’s people are facing multiple crises in health, the economy, and climate.

 

“In fact, Filipino workers have their own war to win - a Wage Increase for Wage Recovery or WIN WAR that the government of President Marcos must seriously address,” said Magtubo.

 

PM has been calling for a wage increase of P100 across-the-board to recover lost value of wages due to soaring inflation. 

22 November 2022

Saturday, November 5, 2022

Fuel subsidies and cash aid are good but a wage hike is better—labor group

 

The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) stated that targeted relief in response to inflation is welcome but a wage hike is the best safety net for all workers. “All workers have been affected by the surge in inflation and deserve a P100 across-the-board salary increase. We call on Congress to legislate this urgent relief for all,” demanded Rene Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and a city councilor of Marikina.

 

The group averred that P76 has been eroded from the P570 minimum wage in Metro Manila as a result of the continuous rise in prices. “We call for a new round of wage hikes to recover the lost purchasing power of workers not just in Metro Manila but in the whole country due to the surge in inflation,” added Magtubo.

 

Inflation in October reached 7.7%, significantly higher than the 6.9% in September. The October inflation figure was the highest recorded since December 2008, which was in the context of the onset of the global financial crisis. Notably, inflation is higher in areas outside Metro Manila.

 

PM’s demand for a wage hike is based on an initial computation by the Labor Education and Research Network. The computation for wage erosion took account of the rise in prices since the effectivity of the P570 minimum wage in Metro Manila last June 4.

 

“The P570 minimum wage in NCR is actually just worth P494 by October. P76 has been shaved off the real value of the minimum wage and workers are now poorer by that amount every day. Before the P33 minimum wage hike in June 2022, the minimum wage was P537. Meaning, not only has the P33 been effectively wiped out by inflation, workers’ wages have pushed back even further,” Magtubo explained.

 

He insisted that “Thus, we reiterate the call we made in May 2022—before the recent round of minimum wage hikes in June 2022 by different regional wage boards—for a P100 wage increase. This should be for all workers, not just those at the minimum, since all have suffered from wage erosion.”

 

The group clarified that the wage hike demand is merely wage recovery. “We are not yet even talking of workers claiming a just share in the fruits of their labor. From 2001 to 2016, real wages stagnated but labor productivity increased by 50% and the GDP doubled,” Magtubo maintained.

 

“Of course, employers will again create horror scenarios of closures and bankruptcy against the workers' demand for a wage hike. They will cry that they are suffering from the economic crisis even though they monopolized the gains of the decade and half-long business boom. Not only does the government owe workers due to unabated inflation but also employers are obligated to share the wealth created by the labor of the working class,” Magtubo expounded.

November 5, 2022

Fuel subsidies and cash aid are good but a wage hike is better—labor group

The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) stated that targeted relief in response to inflation is welcome but a wage hike is the best safety net for all workers. “All workers have been affected by the surge in inflation and deserve a P100 across-the-board salary increase. We call on Congress to legislate this urgent relief for all,” demanded Rene Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and a city councilor of Marikina. The group averred that P76 has been eroded from the P570 minimum wage in Metro Manila as a result of the continuous rise in prices. “We call for a new round of wage hikes to recover the lost purchasing power of workers not just in Metro Manila but in the whole country due to the surge in inflation,” added Magtubo. Inflation in October reached 7.7%, significantly higher than the 6.9% in September. The October inflation figure was the highest recorded since December 2008, which was in the context of the onset of the global financial crisis. Notably, inflation is higher in areas outside Metro Manila. PM’s demand for a wage hike is based on an initial computation by the Labor Education and Research Network. The computation for wage erosion took account of the rise in prices since the effectivity of the P570 minimum wage in Metro Manila last June 4. “The P570 minimum wage in NCR is actually just worth P494 by October. P76 has been shaved off the real value of the minimum wage and workers are now poorer by that amount every day. Before the P33 minimum wage hike in June 2022, the minimum wage was P537. Meaning, not only has the P33 been effectively wiped out by inflation, workers’ wages have pushed back even further,” Magtubo explained. He insisted that “Thus, we reiterate the call we made in May 2022—before the recent round of minimum wage hikes in June 2022 by different regional wage boards—for a P100 wage increase. This should be for all workers, not just those at the minimum, since all have suffered from wage erosion.” The group clarified that the wage hike demand is merely wage recovery. “We are not yet even talking of workers claiming a just share in the fruits of their labor. From 2001 to 2016, real wages stagnated but labor productivity increased by 50% and the GDP doubled,” Magtubo maintained. “Of course, employers will again create horror scenarios of closures and bankruptcy against the workers' demand for a wage hike. They will cry that they are suffering from the economic crisis even though they monopolized the gains of the decade and half-long business boom. Not only does the government owe workers due to unabated inflation but also employers are obligated to share the wealth created by the labor of the working class,” Magtubo expounded. ### November 5, 2022

Friday, November 4, 2022

P76 have been shaved off the P570 minimum wage in NCR due to inflation

Photo from PhilStar

 

The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) stated that P76 has been eroded from the P570 minimum wage in Metro Manila as a result of the continuous rise in prices. “We call for a new round of wage hikes to recover the lost purchasing power of workers not just in Metro Manila but in the whole country due to the surge in inflation. We call on Congress to legislate a P100 across-the-board salary increase for all workers as relief from the shock of rising prices,” declared Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and a city councilor of Marikina.

 

Inflation in October reached 7.7%, significantly higher than the 6.9% in September. The October inflation figure was the highest recorded since December 2008, which was in the context of the onset of the global financial crisis. Notably, inflation is higher in areas outside Metro Manila.

 

PM’s demand for a wage hike is based on an initial computation by the Labor Education and Research Network (LEARN-SENTRO). The computation for wage erosion took account of the rise in prices since the effectivity of the P570 minimum wage in Metro Manila last June 4.

 

“The P570 minimum wage in NCR is actually just worth P494 by October. P76 has been shaved off the real value of the minimum wage and workers are now poorer by that amount every day. Before the P33 minimum wage hike in June 2022, the minimum wage was P537. Meaning, not only has the P33 been effectively wiped out by inflation, workers’ wages have pushed back even further,” Magtubo explained.

 

He insisted that “Thus, we reiterate the call we made in May 2022—before the recent round of minimum wage hikes in June 2022 by different regional wage boards—for a P100 wage increase. This should be for all workers, not just those at the minimum, since all have suffered from wage erosion.”

 

The group clarified that the wage hike demand is merely wage recovery. “We are not yet even talking of workers claiming a just share in the fruits of their labor. From 2001 to 2016, real wages stagnated but labor productivity increased by 50% and the GDP doubled,” Magtubo maintained.

 

“Of course, employers will again create horror scenarios of closures and bankruptcy against the workers' demand for a wage hike. They will cry that they are suffering from the economic crisis even though they monopolized the gains of the decade and half-long business boom. Not only does the government owe workers due to unabated inflation but also employers are obligated to share the wealth created by the labor of the working class,” Magtubo expounded.

November 4, 2022

Thursday, October 13, 2022

Ayuda for workers facing layoffs—labor group

 

In the face of an outbreak of mass layoffs, the labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) called on the government for ayuda for the affected workers. “By ayuda, we do not just mean immediate assistance to the thousands of workers who will become jobless in the coming months but institutionalized social protection for the entire labor force. Sa harap ng epidemya ng tanggalan, ayudang sapat para sa lahat ang sagot,” explained Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and Marikina city councilor.

 

This was the group’s reaction to the estimate by the garments industry association Confederation of Wearable Exporters of the Philippines (CONWEP) that some 9,450 to 10,800 workers may be laid off. CONWEP even forecasted a worst scenario of 27,000 retrenched workers or 10% of the total labor force in the apparel and wearable goods sector.

 

Just two weeks ago, the Sports City group of companies fired some 4,000 workers or one-fourth of its total workforce allegedly due to reduced orders from its clients. Sports City supplies to global garment brands Adidas, Under Armour, Saucony, New Balance and Lululemon.

 

“Aside from the mass layoffs at Sports City, workers also lost their jobs due to the temporary closure of Coca-Cola plants in Iloilo, Bohol, Davao, Cavite, Zamboanga, and Camarines Sur. Employees of Shopee were also fired revealing that retrenchments are along all sectors from manufacturing to services,” Magtubo elaborated.

 

He added that “The worsening economic crisis demands that the government set in place social protection systems that mitigate the impact on jobs, income, health and well-being of people. Social protection is one response to this challenge.”

 

PM is an affiliate of the labor coalition Nagkaisa which at the height of the pandemic demanded public employment, preferably in climate jobs, for unemployed workers over a period of 100 days to nine months at minimum wages or P10,000, whichever is higher. The coalition also called for wage subsidies equivalent to 75% of the prevailing minimum wage to save jobs of workers in micro, medium and small enterprises (MSMEs).

 

“If huge companies like Sports City and Coca-Cola are reeling from economic shocks, what more MSMEs, which comprise 90% of the total number of enterprises. By providing wage subsidies to workers in MSMEs, the government incentives them against shedding their employees. This also protects the purchasing power of workers which enables the economy to float instead of sink due to the crisis,” explained Magtubo.

 

In response to the demand for employment guarantees and wage subsidies by Nagkaisa, the DOLE undertook a study of a social protection floor which has remained unimplemented. “The DOLE should act now and not wait for another Sports City, another Coca-Cola or another Shopee,” Magtubo insisted.

October 14, 2022