THE Federation of Free Workers (FFW) has called for the implementation of a P150 wage hike after President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. announced an 8-percent gross domestic product (GDP) target growth.In its continued advocacy for the P150 daily minimum wage hike, the FFW — along with labor groups Partido Manggagawa, Sentro ng Nagkakaisa at Progresibong Manggagawa (Sentro), National Federation of Labor, and other groups in the Nagkaisa Labor Coalition — is relentlessly pushing for wage increase.Also, the FFW said that the proposed wage increase should be implemented "on top of the minimum wage orders promulgated by the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Boards (RTWPB), as proposed by the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines to the House of Representatives.""There is a fuel hike almost every week, as well as the prices of rice and basic goods, while the minimum wage has been stagnant for the past 35 years. Let Congress pass the P150 wage hike across the country in time for Labor Day," FFW Vice President Jun Mendoza Ramirez said in a statement.Likewise, the FFW welcomed the President's statements, but it also "emphasized the necessity for this growth to be inclusive, shared, and to substantially benefit the ordinary Filipino workers.""President Marcos Jr.'s optimism about reaching the 8-percent growth milestone is worth supporting. Indeed, as we plan for the nation's economic future, our ambitions should be lofty," Ramirez also said."However, it's crucial that our economic plans include concrete measures to enhance the livelihoods of our workers. Economic growth should translate into tangible benefits for them, such as fair wages and job security," he added.The FFW urged the Marcos administration and leaders of the private sector "to not only strive for impressive GDP figures but to also ensure that the rewards of economic success are equitably distributed among all citizens."While echoing the sentiment of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) in highlighting the significance of surpassing the 6-percent growth rate, the FFW believed that "leveraging the demographic advantage to ensure that workers have decent jobs and are adequately compensated and have access to opportunities that improve their standard of living."Ramirez also said that the country should not only aim for a higher gross domestic or gross national product (GNP), but for "qualitative enhancements in the lives of our citizens."They also cited NEDA's preference for "stagnant wages" in the country, in contrast to higher wages in Southeast Asian neighbors, such as Indonesia and Malaysia.Labor groups, including FFW, have continuously backed a P150 across-the-board hike in daily wages of the country's private sector workers.
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