MTUC: New min wage a sell out

Facebook
Twitter
WhatsApp
Telegram
Email

KUCHING: The Sarawak Malaysian Trades Union Congress (MTUC) is disappointed with the negligible increase in minimum wage, to a national standardised rate of RM1,050, which is not based on sustainable economic policy and labour market.

Its Secretary Andrew Lo said MTUC believed that the minimum wage of RM1,050 was the proposal from the employers, and not the full recommendation of the Minimum Wage Council as a whole.

“It only represents five per cent increase when the official inflation has increased by at least 10 per cent while labour productivity has increased by about eight per cent during the period under review.

“The increase must be based on sustainable economic policy and labour market, not at the whims and fancies of politicians. Workers rights must not be hijacked by politics,” he said in a statement here yesterday.

Currently, he said the minimum wage was lower in Sabah and Sarawak only because employers in the two states had been paying lower wages the past decades.

See also  Party-less Baru speaks out of spite

“While the aim is to have a uniform rate, this should be achieved on a gradual basis. To insist on a uniform rate now will risk adopting a lower rate to the detriment of workers in Peninsular Malaysia which make up 70 per cent of the total workforce.

“Given the converging data, we would expect uniformity to be achieved by the next review,” he said. – Bernama

Download from Apple Store or Play Store.