Group pushes P900 daily wage for construction workers to fix shortage

Chinese builders weld steel bars at the construction site of Shuangjiehe Road in the Pilot Free Trade Zone Qianhai & Shekou Area of Shenzhen, south of China's Guangdong Province. ALAMY

MANILA – A party-list group is batting for a P900 per day minimum wage for construction workers to avert a looming labor shortage due to migration.

“We are losing a great deal of good construction laborers to other countries that are paying up to 10 times the P537 daily minimum wage in Metro Manila,” ACTS-OFW representative Aniceto Bertiz III said Saturday in a statement.

He cited the experience of Filipino construction workers in New Zealand getting, on average, P5,300  in daily wage, excluding benefits.

“This is why the government has to raise substantially the floor wage for construction workers. Our sense is, many of them would prefer to stay here at home with their families, as long as they get higher pay,” Bertiz said.

“Under the law, regional tripartite wages and productivity boards may fix minimum wages per industry or economic sector, and not just along territorial lines,” Bertiz added.

ACTS-OFW is not the first to openly call for higher wages for construction workers.

CEO Isidro Consunji of DMCI Holdings Inc., one of the country’s largest builders, had said he favors a daily minimum wage of between P737 to P837 for construction workers.

“They (construction workers) are exposed to the elements (heat and rain). It’s a lot heavier work and a lot riskier (compared to those in other industries such as manufacturing or services),” Consunji said.

Consunji acknowledged that his firm is having difficulty looking for construction workers these days.

The Duterte administration’s economic growth strategy is partly anchored on a P9-trillion public infrastructure development program that includes 75 big-ticket projects.

Last week, the Department of Transportation broke ground for the construction of the country’s first underground rapid passenger transit system – the 36-kilometer Mega Manila Subway, or Metro Manila Subway Line 9. (GMA News)

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here