Back to homepage
| Bacolod | Baguio | Cagayan de Oro | Cebu | Davao | Dumaguete | General Santos | Iloilo | Manila | Pampanga | Pangasinan | Zamboanga |
   
 
   
 

Google
Web
www.sunstar.com.ph

  Local News
No pay hike for private workers
Rival protest groups quarrel over space
It cam be solved under 1967 ordinance, says Joy
This rallyist has been at it for almost a decade
Demonstrators defy rally ban
Inmate, wanting to escape, holds baby hostage
CPPO requires 24-hour access to cops, stations
Councilor proposes disaster declaration
Couple convicted of estafa over sale of lots worth close to P1M




Tuesday, May 02, 2006
No pay hike for private workers

President Arroyo didn’t grant a wage increase for workers yesterday, but she announced a P40 billion package of benefits for both government and private workers during her Labor Day address.

The package includes P20 billion for the third tranche of salary standardization for government workers to be given next year, and the condonation of P11.6 billion worth of loan surcharges and penalties by Social Security System (SSS) and Government Service Insurance System (GSIS).

It also includes P1 billion in income tax exemptions for minimum wage earners.

Workers, however, rejected the offer, preferring a salary increase, amid inflation due to the expanded value-added tax and soaring oil prices.

Arroyo, in her speech during a luncheon with moderate labor groups in Malacañang’s Heroes Hall, said she supports a reasonable wage hike that the regional wage boards should determine.

Arroyo said there is a need to alleviate the burden of the workers while being mindful of the impact of a wage increase on business and employment.

Bargaining

Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) president Democrito Men-doza, in a statement, called for a P75 across-the-board daily wage hike for private workers.

He said 30 percent of the population is still impoverished, 15 percent live on $1 per day, close to three million are jobless, and some 600,000 youth join the labor force every year.

Allan Montano, vice president and secretary general of the Federation of Free Workers (FFW), said they are not expecting much from Malacañang.

He said FFW believes that the best means to get better wages and benefits is through collective bargaining agreement.

Donald Dee, president of the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said representatives from the labor and employers sectors should have a discussion first before facing each other in the regional wage boards.

He said there should be a minimum wage to prevent exploitation.

Breakfast

Meanwhile, militant labor groups Kilusang Mayo Uno, Sanlakas, Partido ng Manggagawang Pilipino, and the Alliance of Progressive Labor rejected Arroyo’s non-wage package.

Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Pimentel Jr. doubted whether President Arroyo can fulfill her promise to give P40 billion worth of employee benefits to workers.

Arroyo started off her Labor Day activities at 5:30 a.m. by having breakfast and coffee with call center officials and employees in Ortigas Center, Pasig City. Government hopes to have a million jobs in call centers and business process outsourcing by 2010.

Arroyo said the unemployment rate has dropped from four million in 2001 to three million because of her administrations job generation efforts. (Sunnex)

For Bisaya stories from Cebu. Click here.

(May 2, 2006 issue)
Write letter to the editor.Click here.
Join the Sun.Star message board.Click here.




ENETWORK HEADLINE
Arroyo offers P40 billion non-wage benefits

ENETWORK NEWS
Rival protest groups quarrel over space
Insurgents attack militiamen in Mindanao
Town to use power of Internet to press for return of bells


[return to top] [home] [network page]


Sun.Star Network Online

LOCAL NEWS
BUSINESS
OPINION
SPORTS
LIFESTYLE
FEATURE

SUPERBALITA
WEEKEND

Classified Power Ads

Past Issues



I © Copyright 2002 - 2006 Sun.Star Publishing, Inc. I Contact the website at onlinedeskatsunstardotcomdotph I