Better than nothing?

Published by rudy Date posted on September 2, 2011

Workers can argue to high heavens about the P20 wage increase being inadequate but that’s what the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board in Central Visayas (RTWPB-7) delivered.

Even even the board’s labor representatives signed the decision despite their misgivings.

Michael Mendoza, area vice president of the Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (ALU-TUCP) Central Visayas chapter, said the amount was too small “but it was better than nothing.”

Regional Director Exequiel Sarcauga of the Department of Labor and Employment in Central Visayas trumpeted the P20 wage increase as “the biggest granted so far by the wage board,” which meant that it was three pesos more than last year’s increase in the minimum wage.

Whatever their argument, government and management representatives in the board got their wish and settled for a P20 wage hike but labor can’t be faulted for lack of trying.

Ernesto Carreon, ALU lawyer, first haggled for P50 increase and then made the final P25 gambit, both of which were rejected outright along with the ALU’s original petition of a P100 wage increase.

A construction laborer can’t grasp inflation statistics and Power point slides that dominated the deliberations of the wage board. What he knows is that even if his employer follows the law and pays him the minimum wage, even that can barely support his family if he’s the lone breadwinner.

To the wage board’s credit, it recognized that a wage adjustment was direly needed in the light of fuel price increases and inflation that make it difficult to make ends meet. These “supervening events” were cited to break the one-year restriction of the Labor Code against disturbing a previous wage order.

The relief just had to be given earlier.

A floor wage doesn’t benefit all employees, but has direct impact on those occupying entry line jobs. New hires, security guards, clerks, outsourced agency employees, factory workers, etc. have this as their only legal protection of being paid their due.

At P305 a day, Metro Cebu’s new rate is higher than most regions in the country, except for the National Capital Region (Metro Manila), where the floor wage is P426 a day.

While labor groups groan that the adjustment is too meager, businesses, like the exporters, are hurting. Exporters asked for a six-month reprieve amid weaker markets abroad owing to the global market recession.

One way employers can lighten the load is to explore alternative benefits for workers like medical coverage and productivity bonuses as non-cash benefits.

Labor-management relations need not end in acrimonious debate. Both parties comprise a symbiotic whole that sustains this country’s economy. –Cebu Daily News

July 2025

Nutrition Month
“Give us much more than P50 increase
for proper nutrition!”

Invoke Article 33 of the ILO Constitution
against the military junta in Myanmar
to carry out the 2021 ILO Commission of Inquiry recommendations
against serious violations of
Forced Labour and Freedom of Association protocols.

Accept National Unity Government (NUG)
of Myanmar.  Reject Military!

#WearMask #WashHands #Distancing #TakePicturesVideosturesVideos

Time to support & empower survivors. Time to spark a global conversation. Time for #GenerationEquality to #orangetheworld!

July


3 July – International Day of Cooperatives
3 Ju
ly – International Plastic Bag Free Day
 
5 July –
World Youth Skills Day 
7 July – Global Forgiveness Day
11 July – World Population Day 
17 July – World Day for
International Justice
28 July – World Nature Conservation Day
30 July – World Day against Trafficking in Persons 


Monthly Observances:

Schools Safety Month

Nutrition Month
National Disaster Consciousness Month

Weekly Observances:

Week 2: Cultural Communities Week
Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprise
Development Week
Week 3: National Science and
Technology Week
National Disability Prevention and
Rehabilitation Week
July 1-7:
National Culture Consciousness Week
July 13-19:
Philippines Business Week
Week ending last Saturday of July:
Arbor Week

 

Daily Observances:

First Saturday of July:
International Cooperative Day
in the Philippines

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