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WSWS : News
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& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Papua New Guinea government overturns minimum pay rise
By Will Marshall
26 February 2001
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With his government under mounting pressure from the World
Bank and International Monetary Fund, Papua New Guinea Prime Minister
Sir Mekere Morauta this month overturned a decision to increase
the minimum wage of rural workers to 60.42 kina per week (about
$US18). The government's own Minimum Wages Board had recommended
a 160 percent increase from the current K24.2 ($7) minimum wage.
The rise would have been the first since 1992, when the Wages
Board acceded to a government demand for a two-thirds cut in the
minimum wage. Moreover, the increase would only have compensated
for the impact of inflation and the collapse of the kina, the
PNG currency, which has halved in value since being floated in
1994.
The Wages Board, which consists of representatives from the
government, employers, employees, the community and church, had
made its ruling despite Mekere's urgings to the contrary. Last
August he stated that the minimum wage could not be set above
K30 a week because of the need to maintain economic stability
and investor confidence.
When employer groups, such as the Chamber of Commerce and the
Rural Industries Council, warned of up to 20,000 job cuts in rural
areas and business closures, Morauta announced that cabinet would
not implement the recommended rise.
Instead, he convened the National Tripartite Consultative Council
(consisting of union, employer and government representatives)
to review the decision and proposed an interim minimum wage of
K32.91 per week, with a youth wage of K18.51 a week. After initially
denouncing the cabinet's decision and threatening national strike
action, the trade union leaders expressed their readiness to participate
in the tripartite review.
Several days later, the media revealed that Morauta and his
ministers, together with all MPs and senior officials, were receiving
salary increases of 60-100 percent under a decision by the Salaries
and Remuneration Commission last December.
Those politicians who doubled their pay included Morauta and
the Speaker of Parliament, Bernard Narakobiwho headed the
commission that ordered the rise. The ruling increased Morauta's
pay from K82,000 ($24,000) a year to K165,000 ($48,000). His new
weekly salary is K3,173about 100 times his proposal for
the new minimum wage.
This revelation provoked considerable discontent and forced
the union leaders to renew their warnings of strikes. Reports
received from unions, women leaders, activists and individuals
throughout PNG condemned the government for the action undertaken
and described the move as selfish, greedy and very contradictory',
the Post-Courier newspaper reported on February 9. They
spoke of frustrations and anger, especially because of the government's
refusal to approve the simple' 2000 Minimum Wage Determination
and yet affording a pay rise for themselves.
National Doctors and Health Workers Association leader Dr Bob
Danaya said the trade unions had respected the government's initial
call for wage moderation in the national interest. The unannounced
pay rise for politicians and bureaucrats, however, meant, all
bets are off. Amalgamated General Workers Union general
secretary Andrew Kandakasi said the pay rise for MPs was inhuman
and would trigger a meeting of the trade union movement to discuss
a national strike.
Nevertheless, these threats have not materialised. Rather,
Trade Union Congress (TUC) officials attended the National Tripartite
Consultative Council talks on February 15 and made two key concessions
to the employers and the government. They indicated that certain
social benefits provided by rural employers could
be considered part of the minimum wage and that employers who
could not pay the rise would be exempted. These negotiations are
continuing.
In the meantime, in an effort to stem the controversy, Morauta
announced that the politicians' pay rise would be reviewed when
parliament resumed in June. He claimed he was legally powerless
to halt the increases before then.
The disparity between the treatment of low-paid workers and
the country's political elite mirrors PNG's growing inequality
and class divide. According to a World Bank report, PNG's per
capita income of about $890 would normally classify it as a middle-income
country. But this wealth is unevenly distributed38 percent
of the 4.6 million people are poor. Rural dwellers, who account
for 85 percent of the country's total population, live on an average
income of $350 a year, or less than $1 a day.
World Bank dispute
The minimum pay recommendation could not have come at a worse
time for Morauta. In the first place, his government last December
announced plans for seven Free Trade Zones in outlying provinces
in the hope of attracting foreign investment by offering low wages.
Trade and Industry Minister John Tekwie said 30 to 40 percent
of his department's resources had been committed to the project.
Since he came to office in mid-1999, Morauta has been trying
without success to reverse the fall in investment in PNG during
the 1990s. This is despite the fact that he has implemented the
IMF/World Bank Structural Adjustment Program, which requires drastic
government cost-cutting, privatisation, public service restructuring
and crackdowns on nepotism and corruption.
The kina plunged to 29.5 US cents in early January, the lowest
level in the past two years and close to its all-time low. According
to highly placed sources, cited by The National
newspaper, the fall has been linked to the World Bank's
tough conditions for the release of the next tranche of its structural
adjustment loan to PNG.
The second tranche of a $US90 million World Bank loan is now
overdue by one month and Morauta's government hopes to meet the
World Bank, IMF and donor countries at a Consultative Group meeting
next month to secure urgently needed further loans.
The sharpness of the pressure being applied by the World Bank
was underlined in the midst of the pay controversy, when Morauta
announced the expulsion of the World Bank's representative in
PNG, Daniel Weise. While on a week-long break in Australia, Weise
received a letter barring him from returning to PNG. Morauta accused
him of interference in Papua New Guinea's internal political
and administrative matters.
Morauta said the World Bank official had made public statements
critical of the government and questioned him about being a signatory
to a government trust fund when it was none of the consultant's
business''. According to the government's Chief Secretary Robert
Igara, Weise had seen fit to engage in the domestic political
affairs of PNG and a campaign to have senior officials
removed from officeincluding Igara and Treasury Secretary
Koiari Tarata.
Weise, a former Treasury official in the Australian state of
Queensland, had been in PNG for more than three years as a World
Bank consultant. He was a central player in the government's privatisation
program and has insisted on seeing through a corruption inquiry
into the collapse of National Provident Fund, a civil service
superannuation fund. He angered the government last May by stating
that the fund was bankrupt, before the completion of an audit.
Having barred Weise, Morauta immediately sought to appease
the World Bank. After three-days of talks with the bank's Country
Director for PNG, Klaus Rohland, Morauta said the bank would upgrade
its presence in the country by appointing a permanent representative
to head its mission. He reiterated his government's determination
to implement the Structural Adjustment Program and other fundamental
reforms to the economy.
In a statement issued later in Sydney, however, Rohland denied
that any agreement had been reached. Rohland said the Bank continued
to support Weise and would look forward to his continued
engagement on PNG's case in Sydney. Rohland said the bank
remained concerned about official corruption. Both the overdue
installment and the Consultative Group meeting would be delayed
until the outstanding issues have been resolved.
Morauta came to office in 1999 with the backing of the Australian
government and financial markets. A merchant banker and former
governor of the PNG Reserve Bank, he re-established relationships
with the World Bank and the IMF, after a near economic collapse
under previous prime minister, Bill Skate.
Morauta's government has remained fragile, however, and is
under sustained criticism from Skate and another former prime
minister, Sir Michael Somare, whom Morauta dismissed from the
government last December. Morauta has suspended several provincial
governments and shut down the national parliament until June to
avoid a no-confidence motion. Under these conditions, Weise's
call for the removal of Morauta's closest aides appears to have
threatened Morauta's efforts to cling to office.
Australian business chiefs and media commentators have backed
the World Bank's stand. They have expressed dismay with Morauta's
withdrawal of Weise's visa and raised doubts about the wisdom
of the Australian government continuing to back Morauta as heavily
as it has since 1999.
The Australian Financial Review said PNG might
face tighter access to credit, as well as a lack of business confidence.
The consequences are hardly less grim for Canberra, which
had understandably put all its eggs in the Morauta basket, but
which now needs to demonstrate, and urgently, greater powers of
analysis than merely leaving it to Mek'.
See Also:
Bill to stabilise
parliament delayed
Papua New Guinea prime minister staves off leadership challenge
[15 November 2000]
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