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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: The
Philippines
Wage freeze hits Philippine workers and poor
By Keith Morgan
24 June 1999
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Philippine President Joseph Estrada, popularly known as Erap
(Buddy), came to power last year in a populist campaign. He presented
himself as a friend of the poor. In May, however,
he rejected outright union demands for an increase to the minimum
wagea decision that will condemn many workers to hardship
and poverty.
Labour unions have been campaigning for increases of between
40 to 100 pesos [$US1.1 to $2.70] in the daily minimum wage, which
is presently pegged at P198 per day to offset the falling value
of the peso and the rising cost of oil products.
Estrada refused to legislate a pay increase, saying that regional
boards should set minimum wages based on the capacity of various
industries to pay. He declared: Workers have different worth
of pay in different regions; that's why we created the regional
boards to determine how much the increase in each region should
be. If the boards decided not to increase pay, he said,
there was nothing he could do.
At present, workers in Metro Manila are paid the highest minimum
rate of P198 a day. But Ibon Databank Statistics has calculated
that the daily cost of living for a family of six in Manila has
increased to P439 and P410 in the provinces. In addition, companies
often fail to pay the minimum rate5,500 firms violated the
wage laws in 1998.
A Kiilusong Mayo Uno (KMU) union official, Felixberto Irag,
from the Southern Mindanao region said Estrada would go down in
history as the most anti-worker president in Philippines history.
Past presidents, he said, had made a point of announcing labour
packages, no matter how small.
Estrada's unwillingness to consider a wage increase follows
attempts earlier this year to scrap the minimum wage law, a move
which is being pushed by the Employers Confederation of the Philippines.
If the wage law were removed, the vast majority of the 26 million-strong
workforce would have no protection at all. Only a small percentage
of workers3.7 millionare covered by unions.
Estrada claimed that a national pay rise would lead to further
job cuts and to a flight of investment. Yet records from the Department
of Labour and Employment show that more than 16,000 workers lost
their jobs between January and March this year. Data released
from the National Economic and Development Authority reveal that
6,762 of those retrenched came from the economic zones of Southern
Mindanao and Central Luzon. The figure for the three months is
only 2,000 less than the official figure for job losses for the
whole of 1998.
In a speech on Labour Day, Estrada claimed: I am appealing
to all of you to sacrifice since all sectors of our society are
sacrificing. Workers, however, are sacrificing far more
than the rich and indeed the members of parliament. An article
in the Philippine Daily Inquirer on May 12 revealed that
out of 220 House of Representative members, 205 are millionaires,
according to records of their assets and liabilities submitted
last year. Their combined net worth reached a staggering P4.1
billion, equivalent to the budget of the Department of Labour
and Employment. An elected house member has an average net worth
of P18.7 million.
At a ceremony to mark the 101st anniversary of Independence
Day, Estrada said his goal was to free the Filipino people from
their enslavement to poverty. Yet the National statistics office
released a survey showing the widening gulf between rich and poor.
In 1998, the top 10 percent received 42.9 percent of all income;
up from 33.9 percent in 1997, while the proportion received by
the lowest 10 percent fell from 2.3 percent to 1.2 percent. All
other income brackets declined.
The trend will continue as the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) and World Bank demand that the government raise the cost
of electricity in order to service its debts. The country's foreign
debt now stands at more than $US45 billion. With real investments
down by 7.7 percent this year, the Philippines is being forced
to borrow from the international banks to service its short-term
loans.
The country's three biggest oil companiesShell, Petron
and Caltexraised the price of oil products in April from
42 to 50 centavos per litre. Shell has announced a further increase
of 57 centavos per litre, with the other two companies expected
to follow. Helen Alveraz, research director of All Asia Capital
and Trust Corporation, said the price increase would flow through
to other goods, including food.
The price increases will have a devastating impact on the lives
of millions of Filipinos who are already living in poverty. Lani
Samonte, who runs a government program for street children, said
there were more then 220,000 homeless children in the country's
65 major cities, with more than half in Metro Manila. Most of
the children have been forced to try to supplement the family
income by begging, peddling goods or doing odd jobs. Samonte said
the figure is certain to grow.
Agricultural companies are using children as labourers to carry
out adult tasks such as planting and cutting cane, while children
are being forced to work in processing plants as cheap labour
in unsafe conditions. A group known as the Citizens Alliance Unified
for Sectoral Empowerment said the practice of hiring children
as labourers continued unchecked by government agencies, which,
when challenged, denied it.
While the government can find no funds to help the poorest
layers of Philippine society, there continue to be reports of
the rich rorting government funds. By Estrada's own admission,
20 percent of all government funds for projects end up as kickbacks
for individuals and companies. Last year the kickbacks totalled
P24.13 billion.
See Also:
Two years after the economic meltdown
No end to the social crisis in Asia in sight
[24 June 1999]
First execution in the Philippines
in 23 years
[6 February 1999]
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