LABOR WATCH
March to Congress: Workers To Press for Wage
Hike, Tax Exemption
Hundreds
of workers are set to troop to the gates of the House of Representatives in
Quezon City when Congress resumes session on Jan. 16. They will press for the
immediate passage of wage increase bill in the face of escalating prices and
government promise of tax exemptions and other non-wage benefits.
BY
DABET CASTAÑEDA
Bulatlat
PHOTO BY
DABET CASTAÑEDA |
Eliseo Taping, a worker of
the Alchophil Metal, Inc. (AMI), is one of the hundreds of workers who will
troop to the House of Representatives (HOR) in Quezon City on Jan. 16 to press
for the immediate passage of two bills. They are House Bills 345, which seeks a
P125 across the board wage increase, and HB 4240, which grants tax exemptions to
workers earning equal to or below P20,000 ($381.71 at P52.395 to a $1) a month.
Workers have been calling
for a legislated wage hike since 1999 while the tax exemption bill has been
pending in Congress since April last year.
FOR WAGE HIKE:
Workers of Alcophil Metal, Inc.
|
The renewed calls for wage
increase and tax exclusions came amidst escalating prices due to the
implementation of the Expanded Value Added Tax (E-VAT) and the government’s
announcements that effective Jan. 1, workers earning P15,000 a month and below
shall be exempted from paying government taxes.
“A farce”
But the pay slips of AMI
workers earning an average of P328 a day or P7,872 a month ($150.25 at P52.395
to $1) show that they have not been exempted from paying government taxes.
“Hanggang TV lang yung
tax exemptions” (The tax exemptions are just TV news), said Rodolfo Acay,
Alchophil Workers’ Union (AWU) president, echoing assertions of progressive
labor organizations that the government’s tax exemption scheme is nothing but
media hype.
Prestoline Suyat,
spokesperson of the militant Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU or May First Movement), said
the government’s tax exemption program only aims to dampen the public clamor for
a legislated wage increase.
He noted that the
Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) offered a tax exemption scheme after
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo dangled in December last year a legislated
wage increase for both the private and public sectors. She took it back however
after the business sector complained and instead went for the offer of the labor
department.
On the other hand, Suyat
said the tax exemption benefit is “a farce” because DoLE’s offer is to exempt
the workers from paying monthly dues but should instead pay taxes annually.
“Kaya hindi naman talaga tax exemption ang programa ng gobyerno kundi
delay lang sa pagbabayad ng tax,” he said.
Cost of living
Taping, who receives a
minimum wage rate, said minimal tax exemptions and non-wage benefits would not
make life better for workers like home.
His gross pay amounts to
around P12,042, which includes an overtime pay of about P4,170. For this, he is
taxed P1,016 a month. He is also deducted the following amount every month:
P1,445.04 (12 percent of his gross pay) to the Social Security System (SSS),
P100 to the Pag-Ibig Housing Fund and P125 to Medicare.
This leaves him with a net
pay of P9,355.96.
This means his family lives
on a P311.86 daily budget, P369.13 short of the government’s computation of P681
daily cost of living allowance.
Taping is the breadwinner
of a family of six. His wife stays at home and takes care of their three
children aged five, two and one. He also sends his younger sibling to school.
They rent a house near AMI
which they pay for P1,000 a month. They earlier left a bigger house because they
could not afford the P1,800 a monthly rent.
He said they pay around
P500 a month for electricity and P800 for water, aside from another P140 for
drinking water. Water has to be ordered, said Taping, because there is no water
line in the part of Valenzuela City where they live.
Because of the high cost of
basic services, Taping said they make do with a measly P150 a day for food. This
allows them only two meals a day, which usually consists of rice, a half kilo of
tilapia (a fresh water fish) which costs around P30, sardines or noodles.
Living on a very tight
budget, Taping said his family could not afford to get sick. “Pag may
nagkasakit sa amin nangungutang na lang ako kaya yung sweldo ko pambayad utang
na lang” (When someone gets sick, I have to borrow money and my salary gets
gobbled up by loan payment), he said.
Although he pays his
monthly dues to Medicare, he said he could only use the health card if he or
anyone in his family is confined in the hospital.
Acop complained that while
they are required to pay their dues to Medicare, there is no refund at the end
of the year if they did not avail of its benefits. “May 15 taon na akong
nagbabayad ng Medicare pero hanggang ngayon hindi ko pa napakinabangan”
(I’ve been paying for Medicare for 15 years but I’ve never gotten anything
from it), he said.
“Makakaalwan lang kami
sa buhay kung talagang madadagdagan ang sahod” (Our life will improve only
if our salary is increased), he added. Bulatlat
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