Philippine bishop laments unjust basic wage

Philippine bishop laments unjust basic wage
Bishop Alminaza. Photo credit: RVA News/CBCP

MANILA (RVA News): With the prices of goods in the Philippines insanely high and the minimum wage still extremely low, Bishop Gerardo Alminaza of the Diocese of San Carlos called the current situation of Filipino workers unjust as they struggle to make ends meet.

“The majority of the workers have been impoverished. So, if you ask me how the situation of the workers in the past years is, it has grown worse,” Bishop Alminaza was quoted as saying in Vatican News.

The bishop emphasised how the past wage hikes “did not match the increase in prices” of the goods in the market, which hinders them from living truly comfortable and financially secure lives.

The Philippines only had a 16.1 per cent increase in the minimum wage from 2016 to 2022, making it one of the lowest wage increases out of six administrations since 1986.

Bishop Alminaza explained how most of the workforce does not have health benefits or the security of tenure, putting their lives at even greater risk. He also pointed out how the Philippines’ agricultural sector is considered “the poorest among the poor” despite its essential role in society as a food producer.

The bishop is also the chairperson of Church People-Workers Solidarity [CWS], which has expressed support for House Bill No. 7568 and Senate Bill No. 2002, which seek to increase the minimum wage by 750 and 150 pesos [$103 to $20], respectively.

Bishop Alminaza said his stance on wage and labour is largely based on Pope Francis’ encyclical Fratelli Tutti. In a statement, he said that everyone in the workplace must support and protect each other just like a family.

He called on company owners to treat their employees like their loved ones, with the workforce being one of the vital capitals in running a successful business venture.

The bishop said an adequate living wage is “necessary and just” and that the Social Teaching of the Church calls for the faithful to “uphold the dignity of labour.”

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He said, “We have to give the workers what is due to them. That is the basic requirement of charity, of love—to give justice.” 

The average monthly minimum wage in the country is only 8,902 pesos, according to data from the Philippine National Wages and Productivity Commission. 

Meanwhile, the Philippine Statistics Authority reported in 2021 that a family of five in the Philippines must earn a minimum monthly income of 12,030 pesos [$1,657] to meet basic food and non-food requirements. If this is to be applied in real life, it means every family member only has 80 pesos [$11] to spend per day. 

As of May 2023, Philippine president, Ferdinand Marcos, Jr., has yet to mandate any wage increase

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