This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 13, May 8-14, 2005
One in 5 firms violate
minimum wage law One in five firms violate
the minimum wage law, Sen. Ralph Recto said last week. Last year, 18 per cent, or
2,921 of the 16,319 firms visited by the Department of Labor and Employment were
found to have violated the minimum wage law, slightly higher than 2003’s 16 per
cent. Recto called on the labor
department to aggressively monitor the observance of wage laws, stressing the
equal importance of hiking the minimum wage and making sure that it is properly
implemented. "What use is the minimum
wage law if, like traffic laws, it is violated with impunity?" he said.
Bulatlat * * * Following
Department of Energy Undersecretary Peter Abaya's
admission that oil companies have already "over-recovered" P 0.47 per liter for
diesel, IBON Foundation urged the government to press charges against these oil
firms. Ibon, an
independent research institution, last week estimated that oil firms overpriced
petroleum products by
P3.97 per liter in 2004. Based on
the 52 million
liters per day actual sales for the first nine months of 2004, oil firms may
have raked in P6.2 billion on top of their regular
income, the foundation added. Ibon also urged a price
roll back, which, it said, should also recover overpricings reported in the
past.
Kontra Kulim-VAT
spokesperson Lina Monsod dared President Macapagal-Arroyo’s economic team to cut
down inflation instead of pushing for another Value-added Tax hike. “The people, especially the
poor, can only take so much. And we very well know Monsod said the country is
now hitting eight to nine per cent inflation, way up the usual three per cent.
The proposed standby taxing
authority that would grant President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo the power to raise
Value-Added Tax is “unconstitutional, treacherous and an insult to Filipino
taxpayers’ collective intellect,” the militant Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (New
Patriotic Alliance) said last week. “This would allow Mrs.
Arroyo to raise the VAT rate from 10 percent to 12 percent should collections
from the compromise VAT law fail to reach P60 billion, or if the CPSD
(Consolidated Public Sector Deficit) exceeds 1% of Gross Domestic Product,”
Bayan Secretary-General Renato Reyes Jr. said. But “CPSD has always
exceeded 1 per cent of GDP. Who are they fooling?” Reyes added. In the Philippines,
taxation powers are only vested in the legislature.
© 2004 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified. Sue oil firms for overpricing - IBON
Consumers urge GMA to reduce inflation to 3%
what they are capable of doing,” she said.Standby tax power
for President is unconstitutional - Bayan