Showing posts with label SONA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SONA. Show all posts

Monday, July 28, 2025

Workers reaction to SONA 2025

 PRESS STATEMENT

Partido Manggagawa

SONA 2025

Ref: Renato Magtubo

Chairperson

 

The President’s candid admission of underperformance in the past three years set a promising tone for a better second half of his term. However, that hope was soon buried under a lengthy checklist of departmental functions—routine matters expected of any administration.

 

What was glaringly absent were bold policy declarations addressing the nation’s most urgent concerns: a substantial wage hike, an end to contractualization, the creation of decent and secure jobs, and decisive action to rein in inflation.

 

Workers keep on pressing for  a legislated wage hike of P200 as well as the passage of the security of tenure bill, but to no avail. Katulad sa baha at bagyo, kailangan ang Presidente sa pagharap sa krisis na ito.

 

The President also acknowledged energy and water supply issues but failed to confront the root causes—particularly the long-standing failures of privatization.

 

The SONA could have been more meaningful if it had tackled core policy failures and laid out concrete reforms for the remaining three years. The country doesn’t need a report card of government activities—it needs a clear roadmap for change. ###

 

https://web.facebook.com/partidomanggagawa/posts/pfbid0sjPyQc63ewsuuoyvdXtWBzettZYgnv3GMrq6FJr8yw993KAwGGyoeUnX1YVo5njfl

Sunday, July 27, 2025

Bigong Pilipinas – War of Dynasties, No War on Poverty

Photo from Rappler


While political dynasties are locked in a bitter battle for power, the working class suffer. Workers continue to face chronic poverty and exploitation, three years under the so-called “Bagong Pilipinas” of the Marcos administration.

 

Bigo pa rin at hindi nagbago ang lagay ng Pilipinas. There is no genuine war on poverty, only a war for power among political clans.

 

Our portrayal of State of the Nation Address (SONA) tomorrow may sound too negative, but that is the hard truth we need to confront. SONA’s usual summation declaring the state of the nation as sound is an insult to millions who cannot afford basic necessities.

 

Wages remain below poverty threshold

 

In all 17 regions, the minimum wage remains below the outdated poverty threshold, forcing workers to live on starvation pay. Despite the government claims of progress with the economy inching up to reach the upper middle-income status, the reality is stark: the cost of living continues to rise, while wages lag far behind. A growing economy must have provided workers with decent jobs, but low pay and contractual jobs dominate the workplace.

 

In short, workers are drowning under the weight of high prices for food, utilities, transportation, and basic services. Mas mataas pa ang baha sa sweldo, ang mas tumitibay ay katayuan ng tiwali sa gobyerno kaysa sa trabaho ng mga Pilipino!

 

The workers’ demands are clear:

 

1.           Immediate wage hike to a level that assures a life of dignity for all workers;

2.           End contractualization by stopping the rampant use of contractual and precarious employment that robs workers of job security and benefits;

3.           Lower prices of goods and services by taking concrete steps to control inflation and reduce the cost of essentials like food, healthcare, energy, housing, and transportation.

 

Accountability

 

We likewise call on all workers and citizens to hold leaders accountable. At this moment, impeaching Sara Duterte is still the right thing to do, but the struggle for reforms must go beyond this. Raising the Filipinos’ quality of life and standard of living is a constitutional duty as equally important as ensuring accountability and good and governance.

 

Finally, we believe genuine reform will only come through the organized strength of the people, not the empty promises of political dynasties.

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Despite P50 NCR wage order: Labor vows to push P200 legislated wage bill in new Congress

 

Image from Dakila

The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) stated that labor groups are united in pushing a legislated wage increase as a pathway to improving the living conditions of workers and a step towards reforming the wage fixing system.

 

 “It is the high-profile campaign of the labor movement for a P200 legislated increase that nudged the NCR wage board to enact the highest ever amount of minimum hike in the region lest it be criticized by workers for being stingy and useless,” Lawrence Cusipag, one of PM’s spokespersons, asserted.

 

“With the 20th Congress convening by July 28 and despite the P50 wage order in Metro Manila yesterday, we reiterate out demand for a P200 salary adjustment that is nationwide and across-the-board so that all workers benefit. Even informal workers and micro entrepreneurs will also gain from this measure through the multiplier effects of a robust purchasing power of formal workers,” explained Cusipag.

 

Labor groups will join multisectoral organizations in the planned mobilization on the State of the Nation speech of President Bong Bong Marcos, Jr. which is also the official opening of the new Congress.

 

“Labor will raise the demand for a legislated wage hike in opposition to the provincial rates which is an instrument to cheapen wages of workers. Labor productivity has risen continuously for the past two decades even as real wages have stagnated. Employers have monopolized the fruits of so-called economic progress,” Cusipag ended. ###

 

Saturday, July 23, 2022

For opposing a wealth tax, Sen. Padilla doesn’t deserve the name Robinhood

 

Photo from Inquirer.net

The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) stated that Sen. Padilla does not deserve the name Robinhood since he opposes the wealth tax proposal. Earlier Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian declared that he is open to studying a wealth tax as a means of raising funds for the government. The labor coalition Nagkaisa had first advocated for a wealth tax in the latter of half of 2020 to finance its call for a robust package of ayuda or assistance amidst the covid-19 pandemic.

 

“For refusing to tax the rich in order to give to the poor, Sen. Padilla is better called the Sheriff of Nottingham instead of Robinhood. He should be renamed Falsehood instead of Robinhood since he dishes out fake news to denigrate the wealth tax,” argued Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and an incumbent Marikina councilor.

 

He added that “For calling the wealth tax a lunacy, Robin Padilla needs literacy in this proposal. His arguments against the wealth tax betrays his utter lack of knowledge of the proposal and his absolute embrace of oligarchs.”

 

The wealth tax is among the set of demands including regular jobs and a living wage being put forward by PM and other groups ahead of the SONA on Monday. PM will join an assembly of rights defenders and social movements at the Bantayog ng mga Bayani on July 25, 2:30 pm. Later, the groups will hold a torch parade and march to Quezon City Hall. The next day, July 28, the human rights alliance IDefend will hold a presscon about its analysis of the SONA.

 

Magtubo emphasized that Nagkaisa’s wealth tax proposal can raise P252-272 billion by imposing a 1% tax on the P25.2-27.2 trillion assets stored in the form of stocks, foreign currency, savings and time deposits and other securities. This amount of money is enough to fund support for micro and small enterprises, and employment guarantees for the unemployed and underemployed according to Nagkaisa’s calculations.

 

“This ball park computation reveals the feasibility of the wealth tax proposal as a revenue generation scheme in the face of the economic crisis. The actual mechanics can be further worked out as we do not want to tax wage earners holding bank accounts. Instead we should only tax the filthy rich, say those with P2 billion in wealth, and adjust the tax rate to raise the same amount of P252-272 billion. Thus, the wealth tax is only for the super billionaires, not even for wealthy action stars. But imposing a wealth tax on the richest 50 Filipinos won't even make these families poorer than Manny Pacquiao.” explained Magtubo.

 

He asserted that “In any case, the wealth tax is not even revolutionary. Sober governments in Luxembourg, France, Switzerland already implement wealth taxes. In form, a wealth tax is no different from the real property tax imposed by local governments which hardly anybody finds lunatic.”

July 23, 2022

Saturday, December 29, 2018

Labor Yearender: Endo, TRAIN spur labor disputes, workers’ unity


Image result for may 1 rally philippines

The unfulfilled promise to end contractualization and the runaway inflation due to the imposition of TRAIN led to an outbreak of labor disputes in 2018 and the forging of a historic unity among workers’ groups in the country. According to the latest data from the National Conciliation and Mediation Board (NCMB), there were 21% more notices of strikes from January to August this year compared to the same period last year. Of the nine actual strikes recorded, five of them involved issues of regularization of workers.

Spurred by the resurgence in workers’ militancy, the country’s rival labor groups finally came together in a joint mass action in the Labor Day commemoration this year. The coalition Nagkaisa, which comprise some 40 labor groups and institutions, joined forces with the Kilusang Mayo Uno in a massive May 1 march from Espana to Mendiola. The disparate labor groups once more came together, along with other social movements and civil society organizations, in the United People’s Action during the State of the Nation address of President Duterte. Formally coming together as Manggagawa Ayaw sa Diktadura, the rival labor organizations marched again as one to slam the threat of a new dictatorship during the commemoration of the declaration of martial law last September 21.

While statistics from the NCMB show that actual strikes were down from 15 to just 9 (January to August this year compared to last year), the government’s data is inaccurate. To cite just one example, it does not include the strike last May at the Dong Seung garments factory in the Cavite ecozone. The Dong Seung strike is the latest in a string of disputes and struggles at the country’s biggest ecozone in the last four years. As a result, a dialogue finally started this year between labor groups, the DOLE and the Philippine Ecozone Authority to guarantee respect for freedom of association.

As the latest NCMB data covered only August, it does not list the biggest strike this year. On September 28, workers of Philip Morris Fortune Tobacco in Marikina and Vigan went on strike for more than one month against mass layoff and job outsourcing.  Undoubtedly many of the disputes and majority of the actual strikes involve contractualization.

The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) announced in its yearend report that some 400,000 workers were regularized this year. If it were true, it is most welcome. Unfortunately the data is suspect as it has not been independently verified. The DOLE based its figures from reports by companies which obviously have an interest in bloating the numbers. It was also not reported if the workers were made regular in the principal companies or just in the manpower agencies.

What is undeniable is that the DOLE’s own compliance orders to regularize workers in the country’s biggest companies have not been implemented. Worse, it has led to mass termination of workers. Last October the DOLE NCR regional office released an order to regularize some 2,600 contractual workers in dozens of agencies used by Philippine Airlines and PAL Express. The order has been appealed by management and has not been complied with. A similar order early this year on the telco giant PLDT to regularize 7,300 endo employees was defied through the termination of service contracts with 39 contractors and thus the retrenchment of the workers.

In the face of a spike in prices, a wave of wage hikes were ordered by different regional wage boards in the country. The increases however were below the amount needed to recover the lost purchasing power of workers’ wages. To cite an example, the P25 hike in Metro Manila is short by 30% to make up for the P35.84 erosion in wages due to the average 7% inflation in the NCR. Partido Manggagawa’s own cost of living estimate for a family of five in Metro Manila is around P1,300 a day, more than double the new minimum wage of P537. This continues the pattern of worsening inequality—real wages are stagnating despite the 50% productivity growth from 2001 to 2016.

The coming new year under the neoliberal and bloody policies of the Duterte administration does not augur well for the working class. On the heap of the broken promises of ending endo and abolishing regional wages, the workers should develop their own power through unity and action. The challenge for the workers movement in 2019 is to build upon the resurgence of militancy and the forging of labor unity to make the popular clamor for change a reality.

December 29, 2018

Monday, July 23, 2018

Alyansa ng maralita “tatambay” muna sa NHA bago sumanib sa United Peoples SONA


Magsasagawa muna ng “Tambay Protest” ang mga myembro ng Alyansa ng Maralitang Pilipino (AMP) sa tanggapan ng National Housing Authority (NHA) alas diyes (10:00AM) ng umaga bukas bago magmartsa patungong Commonwealth Avenue at Batasan para sumanib sa Kalipunan ng mga Kilusang Masa (Kalipunan) at United Peoples SONA (UPS). 

Ayon kay Ver Estorosas, tagapagsalita ng AMP, layunin ng “Tambay Protest” na ipakita sa NHA at sa publiko ang malungkot na estado ng programang pabahay ng pamahalaan. Sa kasalukuyan anila ay bukod sa napakabagal ay kulang na kulang ang programa para tugunan ang pangangailangan ng mahihirap na Pilipino para sa ligtas at disenteng paninirahan. 

Kung tutuusin daw ay ang NHA daw ang siyang “tambay” sa usapin na ito dahil sa napakabagal na implementasyon ng mga programang pabahay – mula sa pagproseso ng aplikasyon ng mga benepisyaryo hanggang sa substandard na konstruksyon ng mga proyekto sa mga off-city at walang kabuhayan na relocation sites. 

Ayon pa kay Estorosas, hindi mauubusan ng benipisyaryo ang programang pabahay ng pamahalaan kaya’t dapat madaliin ang mga proseso hinggil dito at laanan ng malaking pondo. 

Sa kasalukuyan ay umaabot pa sa mahigit 6 na milyon ang housing backlog sa buong bansa at inaasahang lolobo pa ito sa 12 milyon sa taong 2030. Kaya’t pinupuna din ng AMP ang programang build-build-build (BBB) na popondohan ng mga bagong buwis dahil mas nakatuon umano ang mga infrastructure project nito sa mga negosyante at hindi sa pabahay ng mga maralita. 

Ibinabaling din umano ng gubyerno ang pulisya sa madugong anti-drugs at anti-tambay na kampanya na nagdudulot ng pangamba at karahasan sa mahihirap na komunidad. Ang kailangan umano ay magkaroon ng regular na trabaho at disenteng tirahan ang mga Pilipino para ganap na mawala ang mga tambay at pasaway sa mga lansangan. 

Sinamahan ng mga lider ng Partido Manggagawa (PM) ang protesta ng AMP dahil naniniwala ang partido na kawalan ng disenteng trabaho at paninirahan ang tunay na pinagmumulan ng problema. 

Ayon kay Renato Magtubo, tagapangulo ng PM, ang mga usaping ito ang naghahanap ng kongkretong pagbabago sa ilalim ng kasalukuyang administrasyon, hindi pa ang istruktura ng pamahalaan na nais baguhin sa isinusulong na chacha. 

Mula sa NHA ay tutulak ang grupo patungo sa Toyota Commonwealth para sumanib sa Kalipunan at sa United Peoples SONA.

Alyansa ng Maralitang Pilipino (AMP)
23 July 2018

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

State of Negros: The rise of ‘new sacadas’ belies SONA claim of PNoy on labor

NEWS RELEASE
Partido Manggagawa-Negros
28 July 2015

The rise of ‘new sacadas’ in Negros belie the claim of President Aquino during his State of the Nation Address (SONA) yesterday that the country is now moving from cheap labor to high-tech producer.

Fresh from the joint consultation-workshop on the state of sugar workers held in Bacolod City last Sunday, the Negros chapter of Partido Manggagawa (PM-Negros) and the Sentro ng Nagkakaisang Manggagawa (Sentro) described as ‘first world falsehood’ the assertion of the President that high-tech production is taking over cheap labor that for a long time characterized the Philippine labor force.

“What country are you talking about, Mr. President?  Negros is now home to BPOs yet the island remains a country of sacadas,” said the two groups in a statement.

It is clear, according to PNoy, “The Filipino can now compete.  Previously our only selling point was cheap labor.  Now factories for high-tech equipment are coming here, from airplane parts, electrical tricycles, printers, and other digital media products to high-quality medical devices.”

During their Sunday consultation, PM-Negros presented a study that pointed to the rise of ‘new sacadas’ in Negros resulting from the dismal failure of agrarian reform in the island as well as the massive contractualization of farm works in the Sugarlandia.

“The old dumaans (regular workers) were replaced by tens of thousands and contractual workers. And the migrant sacadas that mainly came from Panay and other neighboring provinces before are now replaced by inland sacadas -- a phenomenon that suggests a downside shift in labor relations in the island,” explained the group.

According to PM-Negros, the ‘new sacadas’ of Negros is represented now by tens of thousands of contractual farm workers who comprise at least 80% of the total workforce in sugar plantations in the island.  They receive not more than P150 per day working as planters, weeders, fertilizer applicators, harvesters and haulers.

“Until the late 90s, Negros sourced its shortage of sacadas from outside of the island but now the internal labor market is heavily populated with contractual, seasonal and mobile workers who perform work previously done by regular workers or the dumaans,” said the two groups.

For PM and Sentro, the combination of failed agrarian reform and the onslaught of contractualization schemes created this phenomenon as workers who were displaced due to massive retrenchments lost their employee-employer relationship (EER) and eventually their right to become land reform beneficiaries. 

“This condition left at least 100,000 hectares with no more agrarian reform beneficiaries to claim the lands, creating in effect an army of sacadas that hop from one hacienda to another around the island to find work,” explained the group.

This state of sugar workers in Negros, added the groups, is further threatened by the expected adverse impact of Asean integration on Philippine agriculture once the zero tariff regime begins to be implemented this year.

“We expect massive job loss once the country’s sugar industry fails to survive the intense competition with Thai and Vietnamese sugar,” said PM.

The saddest point, said PM and Sentro, is to hear the SONAs of the past and present Presidents, without any mention of the pressing problems in Negros, specifically the life of sugar workers.


“Ang problema namon, amon lang gid problema. Isa kami sa halimbawa sang SONA nga indi matalupangdan,” concluded the group.

Monday, July 27, 2015

Inequality, jobless growth are PNoy’s legacies—labor group


Press Release
July 27, 2015

With President Benigno Aquino III expected to dwell on his legacies in today’s SONA, the labor party Partido Manggagawa (PM) insisted that worsening inequality and jobless growth are the enduring legacies of his administration.

“Walang naituwid at walang naitawid si PNoy sa kanyang panunungkulan. Economic growth has not tricked down to the masses as unemployment, poverty, contractualization, low wages and lackluster social services persist. Worse, GDP growth has been monopolized by big capitalists as the wealth of the richest 50 Filipinos has ballooned in the last few years thus the chasm between rich and poor swelled even more,” explained Rene Magtubo, PM national chair.

Hundreds of PM members joined the SONA protest launched by the labor coalition Nagkaisa and various multisectoral groups. Ahead of the main afternoon counter-SONA rally, some 50 members of PM-Kabataan, its PM’s youth organization, held a flash mob in front of the TUCP/PGEA compound to dramatize the sorry state of the youth. Other PM-Kabataan members held giant placards that spelled the message: “5 Taon ni PNoy: Kabataan NGA-NGA!” Counter-SONA protests were also held by PM chapters in Cebu at downtown Colon and in Davao in front of the city hall.

Magtubo added that “Even as PNoy focuses on his unique achievements in his SONA, his administration is essentially no different from past regimes in sacrificing the workers and the poor in the altar of globalization. The state of the workers is best illustrated by the industrial tragedy at Kentex and the plight of OFW Mary Jane Veloso. Sweatshops and cheap labor are the norm not just in Valenzuela but everywhere. No wonder, Filipinos choose to go abroad in a futile search for greener pastures, only to fall victim to criminal syndicates, abusive employers and lack of labor rights and social protection in other countries.”

PM’s Magtubo averred that Aquino’s good governance record is at best spotty, as many critics have pointed out that the so-called anti-corruption campaign has only targeted well-known opposition leaders. The group also argues that poverty reduction is dependent on the massive funds allocated to the nationwide dole out program of CCT that remains hobbled by patronage system at the ground. Finally PM also claims that a big chunk of the jobs generated under Aquino is mainly due to the emergency work program.


“By itself, dispensing emergency work is positive but ours pales in comparison to similar programs in other countries. In the Philippines, emergency work in the form of DOLE’s TUPAD lasts only for 15 days for every year while in India, the law called NREGA guarantees 100 days of wage employment for every rural family annually,” Magtubo described.

Saturday, July 25, 2015

PNoy, past governments failed the youth in their transition to the world of work – PM-Kabataan

News Release
July 25, 2015
PM-Kabataan

High dropout rates due to high cost of education amid the prevailing poverty in the country; unemployment; the prevalence of precarious working conditions; and poor state of public services have condemned the youth to a life of uncertainty despite the promises of tuwid na daan under the Aquino administration.
This was the assertion of the youth wing of Partido Manggagawa, PM-Kabataan (PMK), ahead of its pre-SONA “art attack” protest to be held tomorrow at the Quezon Memorial Circle as it railed against the lack of tangible legacy the youth sector has gained under the Aquino as well as the past administrations, specifically, for their failure to eliminate established roadblocks that limit opportunities for young people to secure a better future.
Youth is defined by the UN and ILO as those under 25 years of age.  The Philippine law (RA8044), however, prescribed the 15-30 age group to cover the youth sector.  There are 18.93 million Filipinos under the age group 15-24 and 27.84 million in age group 15-30 based on the 2012 census. Combined this sector represents millions of young people who are in school, in actual work, the idle and the unemployed.
According to PM-Kabataan, the youth’s pathway or transition to better future - from schooling to actual work – remained impeded by age-old problems such as high cost of education, unemployment, and precarious working conditions.
Dropout rate, added the group, remained at 6-7% in elementary and high school and much higher at the college level during the last five years.  “Those who cannot survive this transition end up as unskilled laborers which now comprise 32% of employed persons in the country, or into the world of unemployment which is highest, 52%, in age group 18-24,” said PM-Kabataan spokesperson Ryan Bocacao.
He added that this kind of situation produces the countless Mary Jane Velosos, full time and part time laborers in sweatshop enterprises, and the phenomenal rise in the number of batang ina and young parents in the country.
To address this problem the youth group said the government should have been decisive in formulating policies that would establish free education at all levels, bring down the cost of other social services, and in stopping the plague of contractualization in the workplace.
“Unfortunately we haven’t seen progress in policy levels both in education and in the world of work. Lilipas na naman ang isang administrasyon, nadagdagan na naman ang aming edad ng anim na taon, pero narito pa rin kami sa dating sitwasyon na kinalalagyan namin noon,” lamented Bocacao.

PM-Kabataan members come from the ranks of students, out-of-school youth and those who are at work.  The “art attack” protest was their form of expressing their sentiment against the prevailing system in the country and a buildup activity before joining other groups for Monday’s Sona protests.

Advisory: Pre-SONA youth event

MEDIA ADVISORY
Partido Manggagawa - Kabataan

                           
YOUTH in SORRY STATE
                                        (A Pre-SONA Protest)
·    High dropout rate in school               6-7% elementary and high school, higher rate in college
·    Unemployment                                  52%  in age group 18-24
·    Precarious working condition            outsourcing/contractualization, informalization
·    Teenage pregnancy/young parents    14% of Filipino girls aged 15-19
                                                                 Date: July 26, 2015
                                   Place: Gazebo 2, Quezon Memorial Circle
                                   Time:  7AM - 6PM 

Activities done through art protest by members of PM-Kabataan

        AM Activities:
o   mural and face painting
o   mask/poster making
o   Flash Mob Dance
o   Boodle Fight
        PM Activities
o   workshops on issues
o   candle lighting for victims of injustice like Mary Jane Veloso and Kentex workers
                                             THANK YOU VERY MUCH!

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For inquiries please contact Ms. Judy Ann Miranda @ 09228677522 or Yuen Abana @ 09162811934

Thursday, July 23, 2015

P700/plate for SONA merienda highlights persisting inequality in the country

News Release
July 23, 2015

The menu for merienda and the cost per plate is out in the news.  It’s P700 per plate for 2,750 guests. So perhaps the last State of the Nation Address (SONA) of President Aquino is best graded according to this practical subject, the labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) said in a statement.

PM is one of the many groups joining the anti-Sona protests on Monday.

According to PM, food is a good benchmark in measuring poverty and inequality and therefore is a solid indicator on whether inclusive growth had been achieved by the Aquino administration.  Food makes up more than 50% of household expenditure.  And many Filipinos are considered as “food poor.”

In the first semester of 2014, the monthly average food threshold for a family of five is estimated at PhP6,125 and a total of PhP8,778 to cover the non-food requirements.   In other words, a poor family needs at least PhP204 per day or PhP41 per capita to meet their food requirements alone.  Poverty incidence (the measure of population who cannot meet their food and non-food requirements) among Filipinos during this period was estimated at 25.8%, according to the Philippine Statistics authority.

“For lawmakers and VIP guests, the SONA menu for merienda may look ordinary or even cheap. But for a jobless person and for the many families living in subsistence level, a P700/plate merienda made of black angus and shrimp rolls, among others, is lavishly alienating and, of course, insulting,” said PM Chair Renato Magtubo.

This is just for the government side alone, said the group.  The country's Richest 50 got the biggest and juiciest slice of our GDP.

Magtubo, who is a former partylist representative, said workers in sweatshops who earn P200 a day, like in the case of Kentex, can squeeze that PhP700 for a week’s survival.  It can also cover a life liner’s monthly electricity bill of 70 kWh, or at least 25 day of crushing MRT ride.

He added that there are many other issues that can be raised against the failure of the Aquino administration to address the fundamental problems that really block the road towards inclusiveness.  But there is no more time to argue these things in the remaining last two minutes of his term.

“At least here in the P700/plate merienda, the persisting inequality in Philippine society is best understood.  And it will be good for the people to know that for those who will be inside the Batasan Complex on Monday, fine dining is most memorable than listening to PNoy’s last SONA,” concluded Magtubo. ###

Friday, May 29, 2015

Labor group dares PNoy to certify bill criminalizing OSH violations

Press Release
May 29, 2015

The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) today challenged President Benigno Aquino III to certify as priority legislation of his administration the bill providing for criminalization of violation of occupational safety and health (OSH) standards. “PNoy’s declaration that there needs to be an ‘integrated multi-disciplinary approach’ in response to the Kentex factory fire are highfalutin words good for bureaucrats but abstract to workers who want to see concrete action and political will from the government,” averred Rene Magtubo, PM national chair.

It was reported that last Wednesday that President Aquino met officials from the Labor Department and other agencies regarding the government’s response to the Kentex fire. Even earlier Labor Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz pushed for the enactment of pending bills that mandate stiffer fines and jail terms for employer breach of workplace safety standards.

“We welcome Secretary Baldoz’s support for bills criminalizing OSH violations but until her boss PNoy certifies as urgent such pending legislation, they remain so much noise signifying nothing,” Magtubo insisted.

PM had been vocal in calling not just for justice for workers killed and injured in the Kentex fire but for labor inspection and enforcement reforms. As an immediate reform, Magtubo called for deputizing labor leaders as additional labor inspectors. PM is also pushing for criminalization of  OSH violations as a potent deterrent.

Magtubo said that “Workers can forget PNoy’s slight of not even visiting the Kentex factory after the fire or the wake of workers killed, but we cannot forgive if in the coming State of the Nation address he will not certify as urgent the bills providing for criminalization of OSH breach and for protection of security of tenure.”


Labor groups have been campaigning for passage of security of tenure bill that will regulate the rampant practice of replacing regular workers with contractual laborers. In the wake of the Kentex fire, it was found out that Kentex not only violated OSH standards but also labor laws, including using an illegal contractor to hire agency workers in the factory.

Monday, July 28, 2014

Workers join counter-SONA rally to slam inequality despite growth

Press Release
July 28, 2014

Workers led by the militant Partido ng Manggagawa (PM), the fighting union Philippine Airlines Employees Association (PALEA) and the labor coalition Nagkaisa joined the counter-SONA rally this afternoon. The workers contingent merged with the mobilization of groups Freedom from Debt Coalition and Kontra Pork that marched along Commonwealth Ave. from Tandang Sora at 1:00 p.m. to the Batasang Pambansa. PM chapters in Cebu, Bacolod, Davao and General Santos City held similar actions today.

PM slammed government policies that exacerbated social inequality amidst economic growth. “PNoy’s inclusive growth is rhetoric without results, just like ‘daang matuwid’ that has been exposed as a myth by the persistence of pork barrel and the controversial DAP,” asserted Wilson Fortaleza, PM spokesperson.

As proof of growing inequality, Wilson Fortaleza pointed to the undiminished number of jobless Filipinos in contrast to the inflation in wealth of the rich under the five years of the Aquino administration. “In January 2010, unemployment and underemployment rates were 7.3% and 19.7% respectively and they basically remained unchanged at 7.5% and 19.5% in January of this year. Meanwhile the wealth of Henry Sy, the richest Filipino, ballooned from USD5 billion in 2010, when Aquino came in, to USD11.4 billion this year according to Forbes,” he elaborated.

“How can there be inclusive growth when PNoy allows contractualization to run rampant and the prices of basic commodities and services like rice and electricity to rise unregulated?,” Fortaleza argued.

PM also called for a citizen’s audit of the DAP to investigate any anomalies and patronage in the disbursement of the billions in people’s money and workers taxes.


PM members brought makeshift cutouts of the number “5” to symbolize inaction on worker demands for the last five years. The raised by the group rallyists include: “Ika 5 taong SONA ni PNoy: Busabos pa rin ang Boss!” and Sa 5 SONA ni PNoy: Walang naituwid na patakaran, Walang naitawid mula sa kahirapan!”

Mga manggagawa, lalahok sa kontra-SONA rally para batikusin ang inekwalidad sa gitna ng pag-unlad

Press Release
July 28, 2014

Lalahok ang mga manggagawa sa pangunguna ng Partido ng Manggagawa (PM), unyong PALEA at ang koalisyong Nagkaisa sa kontra-SONA rally ng mga grupo mamayang hapon. Magmamartsa sila mula sa Tandang Sora hanggang Batasang Pambansa simula ng ala una ng hapon. Ang chapters ng PM sa Cebu, Negros, Davao at General Santos City ay magkakaroon din ng kahalintulad na pagkilos.

Planong batikusin ng grupong PM ang pananatili ng ekwalidad sa kabila ng ipinagmamalaki ng administrasyong Aquino na pag-unlad ng ekonomiya. “Puro salita at walang gawa ang islogan ni PNoy na inclusive growth. Paano matitikman ng mga manggagawa ang kaunlaran kung ayaw ni PNoy na tutulan ang kontraktwalisasyon at hinayaan lang ang pagtaas ng presyo ng mga pangunahing bilihin at mga gastusin gaya ng kuryente,” paliwanag ni Wilson Fortaleza, tagapagsalita ng PM.

Kaugnay ng kontrobersyal na DAP, panawagan ng grupong PM na maglunsad ng special audit sa mga pinaglalaan ng pondo sa pamamagitan ng isang independent people’s commission kasama ng COA.

Magdadala ang mga miyembro ng grupong PM ng mga cardboard na numerong “5” upang maging simbolo ng limang taong kawalang aksyon ng administrasyon ni Aquino sa mga kahilingan ng manggagawa. “Sa ika-5  SONA ni PNoy, busabos pa rin ang mga boss. Sa ika-5 SONA ni PNoy, walang naituwid na patakaran at walang naitawid mula sa kahirapan,” pagdidiin ni Fortaleza.

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Saan makakarating ang P10? P10 wage hike won’t make growth inclusive

Wilson Fortaleza
Partido ng Manggagawa
09 September 2013
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

It will take 20 years for a minimum wage earner, assuming he starves himself and his family to death in order to save the full amount in two decades, to gain what Labor Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz earned in just a span of one year.  Secretary Baldoz was a non-millionaire in 2011 but became one in 2012 with a net worth of P2.9 million owing to the assessed value of her properties, according to a news report.[1]

The recently issued Wage Order granting P10 wage hike in the National Capital Region won’t change this picture of inequity.  For while presidential and legislative pork and perks shored up the lavish and comfortable lifestyles of a few VIPs in government, millions of workers live a life of hopelessness and deprivation in this country.

Ten pesos (P10) can’t even buy a half kilo of rice or bring a minimum wage earner farther than a five-kilometer bus ride.  That is exactly how ordinary workers translate the P10 wage increase.  In fact many reactions from those interviewed on-cam, though they vary on what a P10 coin can instantly buy for them, point to the common view that the new wage order is a comic relief or a “painful joke” as described by the spokesperson of the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP). 

Nevertheless, whether it is a painful joke or a whipping insult to workers under a prevailing environment where billions of public funds are lost to official fraud and scams, the new wage order exposes in a more shameful manner the ugly face of inequality in this country.  And unless this problem is addressed through major policy shifts in the remaining years of the Aquino administration, PNoy will be remembered as a president whose legacy was making the VIP treatment of Napoles possible, but not for making Philippine growth inclusive for the poor.

Palace defence

Malacanang, through assistant Presidential Spokesperson Abigail Valte, defended the P10 wage hike as a balancing act on the part of the government.  We keep on hearing this line since time immemorial.  And nobody, including experts, dared to dispute this argument that sees the ghosts of inflation and mass unemployment once wages are adjusted to satisfactory levels.  If such is true, other countries may have taken the same course and by mistake joined our cluster at the lowest bottom of the global pay scale. On the other hand, the experience of other countries is that wage increases do not only provide workers a decent living but more importantly it creates demand and contributes to the sustainability of economic growth.

A study on global pay scale[2] conducted by the International Labor Organization (ILO) using 2009 data showed the Philippines landing at the bottom third in the list of 72 countries.  The global average was US$1,480 per month.  The Philippines with US$279 only was slightly higher than Pakistan’s US$255 and Tajikistan’s US$227.

Furthermore, even in terms of GDP share per capita, the ASEAN comparison also showed that the Philippines is lagging behind its neighbours, besting only Vietnam, Cambodia and Lao PDR. 

What “balance”, therefore, is Ms. Valte talking about?  Did the government achieve balance with the P10 wage increase? Can this amount correct the imbalance between the swelling fortunes of the Philippines’ richest capitalists and the starvation wage levels for their thousands of contractual employees?  The President told us during his SONA last July that the strategy in making growth inclusive is “sagarin ang oportunidad para sa lahat”.  Again we ask: Sagad na ba ang P10?

Faces of inequality

Balance, for us, is none other than the presumed regulatory framework of the State. As such, before a sense of balance comes out, a social framework has to be established first to arrive at a measurable outcome.  Therefore, if the framework is inclusive growth, then the objective should be set on lifting the many from the margins and bringing them into the center of economic growth.  On the contrary, if balance is understood as plain neutrality, which is downright hypocrisy, with regards to contending class interests in the country, State policies in effect reinforce or worsen rather than rectify the chronic social imbalance. 

For instance, we only have, in the number of employed persons, 4.6% professionals and 16% government and private executives who enjoy relatively high wages and other privileges. But a third of 37 million “employed” Filipinos, based on April Labor Force Survey, are laborers and unskilled workers.   Another 25% are service and sales workers, farmers, fisherfolks and forestry workers.  They are the majority of underpaid workers who receive the barest or even less of the mandated minimum wages all over the country.

Our own estimate suggests that a family of six in Metro Manila need at least P1,200 per day to enjoy decent food and non-food requirements.  The new minimum of P466 is not even half of that amount.  It’s almost sure that workers in other regions will receive lower than the P10 wage hike granted in NCR and have to wait for a longer period of time before they are issued a new wage order. 

This is the face of labor in the country today.  On the other side are capitalists, big and small, who also demand balance from government policies that they effectively get most of the time.  The Forbes Magazine’s latest list of richest people in the world includes 50 Filipino billionaires who control more than one fourth of the country’s GDP.  Their combined net worth of US$65.8-B is equivalent to the one year income of 30.9 million minimum wage earners.  From 2006 to 2013, their fortune increased by 348%, the richest ten of them by 1,005%.

During the same period, however, real wage in Metro Manila increased by only 41% from P258 to P363.  Now how is balance settled in this case?

I am sure the Palace’s spokespersons will evade the question by pointing out that small scale enterprises comprise more than 90% Philippine business, many of which were exempted from previous wage orders.  Hence the small but many become the cover of a general policy on cheap labor.

If such is the logic of balance, does this mean Filipino workers have to first wait for these small businesses to grow big, which is next to impossible under the era of globalization, before a living wage provided under the Constitution is achieved?  The bosses deserve no less than a straightforward answer from our well-paid, porked-up executives and policymakers in government.

If the answer is yes, the more we want to hear about concrete strategies on how to make the country’s growth more equal or inclusive through other social policies.  What we see, however, is the reverse.  Instead of providing universal social protection in the absence of full and gainful employment, it is the government itself which pushes for the removal of government subsidies for instance in MRT and LRT systems, the corporatization/privatization of government hospitals, budget cuts in state colleges and universities, the appropriation of city spaces to giant land developers, delays in land reform, and the unrestrained execution of privatization and deregulation policies that keeps prices of water, power, and other basic needs such as oil and staple food to inordinate levels.

Perpetuating the pork barrel system through other forms or through other name will only aggravate the problem with the same breed of politicians presiding over the body in charge of policy making.

Feel the pain

But how can we expect an honest-to-goodness response from our well-paid government functionaries when they don’t feel the pain of living the life of a minimum wage earner?  For the past 20 years, for instance, Congress turned a deaf ear on workers’ plea for a legislated wage hike and proposed reforms in wage fixing mechanisms. In the last two decades, the regional wage boards—as a wage fixing mechanism— have been proven ineffective in addressing the gap between minimum wage and the cost of living. Hence the wage boards should be abolished and replaced with a national wage commission mandated to fix minimum wage at the national level and to provide other relief measures to workers in order to approximate national minimum wage to the cost of living.

What Congress has passed, on the contrary, were measures that imposed undue burdens to workers and the poor such as contractualization; privatization of essential services such as power and water; EVAT and other taxes; automatic appropriations on debt payments; and outright trade liberalization that effectively killed local industries and pulled the break to our march towards industrialization. 

Perhaps it is because 98% of members of Congress are multi-millionaires and their main pre-occupation was not the chronic problem of social inequality in the country but the equal division of their pork and perks.  The same is true for the Executive branch where the President leads a club of millionaires aided by VIP technocrats recruited from big business.

The Philippines, the government brags, is the fastest growing economy in Asia today.  But who is going to sing hallelujah to this triumph when inequality persists and labor productivity is rewarded with a measly increase of P10 per day?  Wage increases in times of economic growth is not only just but a rightful share of workers to the fruits of their labor since it is the factor of production that is key to the growth of the economy and the profits of employers.

We have had positive economic growth during the last 30 years except for the crises years of 1984, 1985, 1991, and 1998.  Yet chronic pain has remained because past and present governments continue to pursue the same policy of cheap labor while the country is under the perpetual rule of corrupt politicians.