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ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS
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Friday, July 5, 2019 Vol. 14 No. 268
Right to security of tenure not absolute–biz groups
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By Elijah Felice E. Rosales
@alyasjah
OCAL and foreign business groups are appealing to President Duterte to veto the security of tenure (SOT) bill in a lastditch effort to keep the country’s employment regime in status quo. In a letter dated July 1, business groups asked the President to prevent the SOT bill from becoming a law. They argued its objective was already achieved under Executive Order (EO) 51 and Department Order (DO) 174 of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE).
“If passed into law, the [SOT] bill will have adverse effects on the Philippines’s global competitiveness and its capability to create more and better quality jobs for Filipinos,” the letter read. “Both DOLE’s DO 174, which took effect in early 2017, and EO
51, which took effect in mid-2018, already [prohibited] ‘Endo.’ If Endo is dead, therefore, the SOT bill is superfluous,” it added. The end-of-contract scheme, popularly known as Endo, is the practice of hiring and terminating workers after every five months to
“The regulatory framework must be reexamined to make it more flexible to facilitate business and job creation instead of obstructing new forms of employment as what would be the consequence of the SOT bill in the event it is signed into law.”
circumvent their regularization. Business groups also argued the right to a secured tenure in the workplace is “not absolute.” Employers, they said, should still See “Security of tenure,” A2
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@ReaCuBM
HE board of the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) has moved to revoke its authorization on the sale of its Manila North Harbor property pending the assumption of Rolando L. Macasaet as their new chairman. This was revealed by Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III who Macasaet reported to via mobile messaging. Dominguez said Macasaet told him after the board met on Thursday morning it also accepted the resignation of Jesus Clint O. Aranas as president. Macasaet said the board revoked resolutions authorizing the sale of the property of International Container Terminal Services Inc. and
Philippine Ports Authority “until further review and consultation with all concerned stakeholders.” “In fairness to the board, Aranas always assured the board that this transaction had the approval of PRRD [President Rodrigo R. Duterte],” Macasaet’s message said. He also told Dominguez: “As you instructed, I assumed the OIC position” and that he “will officially advice Malacañang [through] ES [Executive Secretary Salvador C.] Medialdea and you through a formal letter.” Earlier, it was reported that Aranas tendered his resignation as head of the GSIS due to “personal reasons” effective July 2. Before his resignation, Aranas had reiterated the plan of the GSIS to sell its Manila North Harbor property, despite the claims of port
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n
See “GSIS,” A2
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D.O.L.E. WANTS TO EVALUATE IMPACT OF 14-MONTH PAY By Samuel P. Medenilla @sam_medenilla
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HE Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) said there is a need to carefully study the impact of a bill proposing the grant of 14-month pay to workers. Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III said in a statement that he is reserving his support for the legislation until a study on its impact is completed. “We support anything that benefits our workers and their families. However, we must ensure that the proposal will not cause imbalance between the needs of labor and the capability of employers. We must study it very well,” Bello said. He said the assessment is necessary since the 14th-month pay will cover all companies, including micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs). Last Monday, Senate President Vicente Sotto III filed Senate Bill 10, or“An Act Requiring Employers in the Private Sector to Pay 14th-Month Pay.”
GSIS revokes resolution to sell North Harbor lot By Rea Cu
2018 EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS
Sotto also told the BusinessMirthat a House counterpart bill mandating the 14th-month benefit is set to be filed by Reps. Precious Hipolito and Kit Belmonte in order to fast-track simultaneous passage of the 14th-month-pay bill in the two chambers. The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) backed the proposal, saying it will help augment the insufficient income of workers. Employers warned, however, that requiring the private sector to give workers a 14th-month pay will cause inflation to spike and the Philippines to lose its competitiveness against Southeast Asian peers. Employers Confederation of the Philippines President Sergio R. Ortiz-Luis Jr. said institutionalizing the grant of 14th-month pay to workers could injure the operations of MSMEs. MSMEs will apparently be left with two options to shoulder higher labor cost: increase the prices of their products or reduce their work force. ror
Rice tariffs collection at ₧5.9B
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IN this BusinessMirror photo, a visitor wears a safety helmet at the Manila International Container Terminal, which is located in a property the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) wants to sell. However, the GSIS board, during its Thursday meeting, revoked its authorization on the sale of this property pending the assumption of Rolando L. Macasaet as new chairman. NONIE REYES
HE Bureau of Customs (BOC) collected P5.9 billion in tariffs from some 1.43 million metric tons (MMT) of rice imported by traders following the implementation of the rice trade liberalization law in March, according to the Department of Finance (DOF). In a report to Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III, Customs Commissioner Rey Leonardo B. Guerrero said preliminary data indicated that the Subic Bay port recorded the highest collection of rice tariffs at P1.37 billion. During a recent DOF Executive Committee meeting, Guerrero also reported that the Port of Manila collected P978.51 million in tariffs, followed by the Manila See “Rice tariffs,” A2
US 51.1880 n JAPAN 0.4748 n UK 64.3740 n HK 6.5646 n CHINA 7.4385 n SINGAPORE 37.7548 n AUSTRALIA 35.9749 n EU 57.7349 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.6502
Source: BSP (4 July 2019 )