More details on the campaign here.
About this site
This website focuses on issues regarding social protection in Asia and the activities done by the Network on Social Protection Rights (INSP!R) and its members. It is under the editorial oversight from the Asia Steering Committee, composed out of members from India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Cambodia, Indonesia and Philippines. It is meant to foster dialogue and share experiences.
The articles describe challenges and achievements to improve the right to social protection to workers in the region, with a specific focus to gender, youth and informal workers.
24 June 2016
India partners express their support to campaign of Social protection for all
More details on the campaign here.
22 June 2016
Philippines: alliance to increase the minimum wage
There are currently about a thousand wage levels in
the Philippines, regulated by Republic Act 6727 or the Wage Rationalization Act
of 1989 which created the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board,
which determines the varying levels of minimum wages for the regions in the
country. An alliance of organisations composed out of COURAGE, ACT, and three
WSM partners: trade union confederation Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU), Alliance of
Health Workers (AHW) and the Young Christian Workers of the Philippines, are
demanding the scrapping of RA 6727 and in its place, the enactment of a National
Minimum Wage Law. This alliance came behind a joint demand: a National Minimum
Wage of 306€ or PHP16.000 per month for the public sector (health workers,
teachers …) and 14,3€ or PHP750 per day for workers in the private sector.
The 9€ or PHP466 daily minimum wage for
private-sector workers in the National Capital Region and the 173€ or PHP9.000
monthly salary of government employees on Salary Grade 1 do not cover even half
of the Family Living Wage, currently pegged at 20,8€ or PHP1,086 a day. The
alliance arrived at their demanded amount by multiplying PHP1.086, which,
according to independent think-tank Ibon Foundation, is the family living wage
by 30 days and then dividing the product by two. The alliance supports also
different sectoral wage struggles, like an entry level salary for nurses of 480€
or PHP25.000 per month. 66 million Filipinos are living on 2.7€ or less per day
while the cost of living for one family is estimated at 635€ per month.
NGWF and their struggle for minimum wage in Bangladesh
In Bangladesh, the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) used its own method to calculate minimum wage in its working paper 106. Their study is undertaken to come up with a definition and method for calculation of the minimum wage based on the ILO Minimum Wage Fixing Convention, 1970 (No. 131). Based on the definition, the minimum wage has been estimated under three scenarios – poverty line, actual expenditure and aspirational diet. Considering the industry’s capacity, the study proposed a phase-wise implementation of the minimum wage under which about 80 per cent of the proposed wage (Tk. 8,200 or 105USD) equivalent to Tk. 6,500 could be provided in the first phase.
The WSM partner National Garment Workers Federation (NGWF) refered to that study to advocate in 2013 for a minimum wage and would add 20% to it to become a minimum decent living wage. NGWF is currently trying to create consensus with other garment federations to demand minimum wages for the garment sector to be increased.
The WSM partner National Garment Workers Federation (NGWF) refered to that study to advocate in 2013 for a minimum wage and would add 20% to it to become a minimum decent living wage. NGWF is currently trying to create consensus with other garment federations to demand minimum wages for the garment sector to be increased.
Indonesia and others call for ASEAN regional minimum wage
Indonesia has announced its intention to propose a regional minimum wage for ASEAN during a recent World Economic Forum event held in June in Kuala Lumpur. Indonesian officials cited wage disparities between low cost production hubs such as Vietnam and those economies with more expensive labor forces, and expressed concerns that these differences could result in a race to the bottom and ultimately lead to the exploitation of workers. The specifics of Indonesia’s proposal are expected to be released at the upcoming ASEAN manpower ministers’ meeting.
There has been considerable fanfare behind the idea of an ASEAN minimum wage, with Cambodia and Vietnam among those showing support. However, the extent of regional commitment remains to be seen as nations continue to compete for capital inflows brought on by a number of pending trade agreements and relatively competitive workforces. Questions also arise over the current capacity of ASEAN as a whole to institute regional standards of this magnitude.
There has been considerable fanfare behind the idea of an ASEAN minimum wage, with Cambodia and Vietnam among those showing support. However, the extent of regional commitment remains to be seen as nations continue to compete for capital inflows brought on by a number of pending trade agreements and relatively competitive workforces. Questions also arise over the current capacity of ASEAN as a whole to institute regional standards of this magnitude.
The Cambodian struggle to increase the minimum wage
Interview with:
Bean Channy, Project officer CLC
Meas Vanny, Legal Officer of C.CAWDU
There are about 700,000 footwear
and garment industry workers in 700 factories in Cambodia, the sector which accounts
for the lion’s share of the country’s exports. Hence, increasing the minimum
wage for this sector has a huge impact. In the past two years, the efforts from
the trade unions to get the minimum wage increased have met with much
resistance and oppression, and also led to actions around the world, targeting
Cambodia’s diplomatic representations and the big brands buying clothes in
Cambodia.
Can you explain a bit of the
history regarding the struggle for the minimum wage in Cambodia?
Workers’ stories related to a living wage
Sovann's dream: Enough to eat (Cambodia)
“They told us the shipment was urgent. We were scared of being insulted and forced. We worked even when we were sick. We worked even when we didn't have enough sleep or enough food. I'm so broken down.“
Ratna’s dream: a safe pregnancy (India)
Ratna was 8 months pregnant and working as a contract worker in Bangalore when she began to suffer labour pains. She had no choice but to go to work as it was a salary day and she could not afford to miss her wages – if she was not present she would have to wait until the end of the month to receive her pay.
The pains worsened around 10 am. She approached her supervisor for permission to leave, but was told she must ask permission from the manager. She was finally able to leave at 12.30pm, but was further delayed by the security guards. By the time she left the factory she could barely walk 10 feet and ended up giving birth on the footpath.
It was too late to save the baby, with the umbilical cord uncut due to no proper healthcare, by the time she reached home her baby had died.
Nupur’s dream: to finish school (Bangladesh)
Before starting work in the garment factory, Nupur, 19, was living in a village and attending school but was not able to continue after the 5th grade. Her parents could not pay the school fees anymore. Nupur and her father are the only breadwinners in the family. Her father cannot work all the time due to a chronic disease. The family depends on Nupur’s wages as a garment worker.
Salong’s dream: a safe bathroom (Cambodia)
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Mim's dream: the clothes she makes (Bangladesh)
Mim produces clothes for major western brands that are seen on highstreets across €ope. Like many young woman, Mim, 23, dreams of dressing up, but on the poverty wages she earns this remains a dream. "I really like the clothes I make, and I would very much like to wear them myself. But I could never afford them!"
Phalla’s dream: Saving for her own atelier (Cambodia)
Phalla earns US$120 a month including overtime, she supports her family including her parents who are sick and also has health problems of her own. Phalla's dream is to save enough money to go to school and open her own atelier, but she says saving money as a garment worker is impossible. “I can never save any money,” she said. “If I did, my parents would die and I would too.”
Asian Labour Builds a Global Movement for Living Wage: The Asia Floor wage
Anannya
Bhattacharjee,
International Coordinator, AFWA
Garment
workers in Asia, the majority of whom are women, currently earn around half of
what they require to meet their own and their families’ basic needs, such as
for food, water, education and health care. Living wage has been a key demand
among labour activists in the garment industry for a long time. The demand has
been made to the brands over a long period with very little progress beyond
rhetorical support. Three main arguments have been put forward by reluctant
brands. First, that there is no common definition of a living wage and no
method of calculation; therefore, it is not possible to pay something that is
not defined. Second, that any attempt to demand a living wage at a national level
results in relocation across the border; and therefore is punitive to national
economies. Third, that demand for a living wage is often driven by Northern
activists without a collective demand from the global South.
India: hard data towards the rights of unorganized workers’ decent living income
By L.A. Samy,
Steering Committee member for India,
Executive Director of AREDS
In India, the size of the informal sector, which
comprises 94% of the worker population, is increasing day-by-day and it has
been accelerating at an alarming level with the implementation of globalization
policy in 1991. Since India was an agrarian nation, it was the agricultural
sector that provided employment opportunities to millions of illiterate and
literate masses in India. Next to the agricultural sector, it was the small
scale and the cottage industries which provided livelihood opportunities to millions
of people in India.
Minimum vs fair vs living wage – concepts
- Minimum wage: the lowest remuneration that employers may legally pay to workers.
- Fair wage: basically, somewhere between the living wage and the minimum wage. ‘Wage levels and wage-fixing mechanisms that provide a living wage floor for workers but ensure competitiveness and refers to skills, tendencies in the sector or country standards, but not to the needs of workers.
- Living wage: the minimum income necessary for a worker to meet their needs that are considered to be basic, to maintain a safe, decent standard of living within the community. It should allow a worker to be able to buy food for him/herself and family, pay the rent, pay for healthcare, clothing, transportation and education and have a small amount of savings for when something unexpected happens.
What is a minimum to live: ILO context and instruments
By Bart Verstraeten,
WSM Political Secretary
Since the 19th century, the idea that labour is
not a mere commodity that can be owned, traded or exploited like any other raw
material, has gained ground. This basically means that labour has to be
rewarded, that workers had to be remunerated for their hard work. The most
common way of doing so is by paying them a wage.
Most prominently, this idea was incorporated in
the ILO Constitution which entrusts the ILO to promote “policies in
regard to wages
and earnings [….] to ensure a
just share of the fruits of progress to all, and a minimum living wage to all
employed and in need of such protection”.
Over the years, the ILO developed several
international labour standards on this topic. The standards offering the
broadest protection in that regard are Convention 131 (C131) and Recommendation
135 on minimum wage fixing, adopted in 1970. Key features of these 2 standards
are:
- Governments are required to put in place and maintain specific machinery to fix minimum wages and to adjust them periodically.
- Representative organisations of workers and employers have to be involved in this minimum wage fixing machinery.
- Minimum wages have the force of law.
How to compare minimum wages
Let’s look at two
countries: the minimum wage for an hour in Belgium is almost 9 €, in Nepal it
is 34 €ocents, 26 times less. But is life not much cheaper in Nepal than in
Belgium? So let us compare in PPP (Purchasing Power Parity), a fictional
currency which compares currencies through a basket of standard products. In
Belgium, minimum hourly wage would be 10,31PPP and in Nepal 1,21PPP. Not as
huge a difference, but still 8.5 times less, especially if one considers that
many Nepalese are paid less than the minimum wage, while many Belgians earn
more than the minimum wage (Belgians on average earn 22 €/hour).
Strength in numbers
463,000 years:
that is how long a worker would have to work to have the same annual income of the
CEO of the French company LVMH, Bernard Arnault. And in 2007, the 200 workers
of this factory Ecce based in France, were fired because the company shifted
production to countries with lower salaries. Whose salary should be lowered
though?
Quote from 1933 on meaning of living wages
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Franklin D. Roosevelt's Statement on the National Industrial Recovery Act, 16 June 1933
20 June 2016
Help save Philippino Hospital
11 critical days are left to save Fabella Hospital before the new President Duterte take over the administration from leaving President Aquino.
WSM partner Alliance of Health Workers (AHW), health workers, patients and the community continue its mobilisation. Inside the world's busiest maternity ward where 100 babies are born every day:
Read more here at the Daily Mail or watch this video.
WSM partner Alliance of Health Workers (AHW), health workers, patients and the community continue its mobilisation. Inside the world's busiest maternity ward where 100 babies are born every day:
- 300 mothers arrive at the Dr Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital each day;
- The hospital serves a Manila slum named Tondo, built on a rubbish dump;
- Mothers share a delivery room with at least five other birthing women;
- Head midwife Anna Prebus has delivered around 200,000 babies;
- New babies and their mothers sleep five or more to a bed;
- Hospital is the subject of new BBC documentary World's Busiest Maternity Ward
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Read more here at the Daily Mail or watch this video.
14 June 2016
Video on exchange regarding elderly in Belgium and Bangladesh: GK meets OKRA
In this video, you can see how enriching international exchange can be. In May 2016, 4 representatives of health care organization GK from Bangladesh came to Belgium for an exchange week with OKRA, the elderly movement of the Christian Workers Movement in Belgium.
They exchanged on how to make sure elderly people get what they deserve (ex. a decent pension, access to health care, etc.) and on how to organize the elderly.
Find out in this video what they learned from this experience.
They exchanged on how to make sure elderly people get what they deserve (ex. a decent pension, access to health care, etc.) and on how to organize the elderly.
Find out in this video what they learned from this experience.
Labels:
Bangladesh,
belgium,
elderly,
gk,
WSM
Location:
Belgium
11 June 2016
W-Connect Latest edition: on Decent Living Income
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This edition also looks closer at the garment sector, which can be key for the struggle for decent living incomes. It employs 25 million workers in more than 100 countries and in 2013, apparel trade amounted to 460.27 billion dollars, with more than 60% of it originating from 10 Asian countries. Out of the top ten world garment exporters in 2013, seven were from Asia. In the region, China, Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Cambodia have covered the bulk of garment production in the last decade. Bangladesh became the second largest producer of garments after China because of its lowest wages for 4 million workers. A race to the bottom which should become a climb to the top, by guaranteeing decent living incomes to all workers, in Asia as around the world. This was already understood in 1948, as article 23 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights states: "Everyone who works has the right to just and favourable remuneration ensuring for himself and for his family an existence worthy of human dignity."
How much longer till this becomes reality?
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