Sabado, Disyembre 17, 2011

UP labor dean: Oust Corona moves might affect PALEA case

18-Dec-11, 12:25 PM | Veronica Uy, InterAksyon.com



MANILA, Philippines -- The high-handedness and the shortcuts that the Aquino administration are resorting to in getting Supreme Court Chief Justice Renato Corona ousted may have dire consequences for labor cases like the contractualization issue of the Philippine Airlines Employees Association now pending before the courts, said Dean Jonathan Sale of the University of the Philippines School of Labor and Industrial Relations.
After the Secretary of Labor assumed jurisdiction of the case and decided that PAL has the management prerogative to contract out three aspects of the airline operations, the workers appealed their case before President Benigno Aquino III, who subsequently affirmed the secretary’s decision. The workers have since gone to the Court of Appeals to seek judicial review of the executive’s rulings. 
“Problem is, what if your courts are controlled by the present administration? What will become of the decision? Would you expect an Aquino-controlled Supreme Court to reverse? Sabi nga nung isang justice, ang sinabi ng hari ay hindi nababali (As one justice said, what the king says is law),” Sale told InterAksyon.com.
The actions of the Aquino administration in its oust Corona campaign are “very dangerous,” said Sale, who is also a lawyer. 
“I am joining my brothers and sisters in the law profession who have spoken out against the totalitarian tendencies of the executive branch,” he said, referring to the statement of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines. 
Sale warned against abusing the President’s popularity to advance its agenda to replace the chief justice with one who is more agreeable to the present administration. He said the President is already a “super president” with enormous powers at his disposable, and he should not use his popularity to manipulate public sentiment. 
“Come to think of it, who is more prone to manipulate the public? A popular president or an unpopular president?” he asked. 
“And you cannot say that (President Aquino) is incapable of abusing power,” he said.
PALEA at UP Lantern Parade
PALEA workers joined the SOLAIR contingent at Friday’s UP Lantern Parade. Aside from the Higantes representing the tripartite worker, capitalist, and government, SOLAIR accommodated the PALEA workers and their PAL plane replica in its presentation. 
When the SOLAIR float approached the Palma Hall and the Melchor Hall steps, where huge crowds gathered to watch the parade, the PALEA workers chanted, “Ang laban ng PALEA ay laban ng lahat (PALEA’S fight is everyone’s fight).”
Sale said the Labor Code tilts in favor of the less powerful between labor and capital. 
Citing Article 4 of the Labor Code, he said the government should have ruled in favor of PALEA in the contractualization case. 
“That is actually in effect mentioned in the law: In cases of doubt, any doubt should be resolved in favor of labor,” he said. 
“But in this case, di ganun nangyari. Parang sinasabi duon (that did not happen. It’s like saying), there is no doubt,” he added.
Workers’ employment contract tied to carrier’s contract to public 
Sale raised another issue that has not been raised in connection to the PALEA contractualization case. He said the PALEA’s employment contract is closely linked to PAL’s obligations under the Civil Code. 
According to a provision in the Civil Code, common carriers -- on land, air, and sea – are required to exercise extraordinary diligence in moving goods and people all throughout the travel process.
Meaning, the carrier’s contract with the public that the government must ensure and uphold covers the period from the time the passenger buys the ticket to until he disembarks and takes his baggage. 
In the event of any damage to cargo or injury to passenger, the law presumes that the common carrier is negligent or at fault, Sale said, adding that the burden rests on the common carrier to establish that it exercised extraordinary diligence. 
“If that is the contract of the carrier, can you cut it up in such a way that you parcel out aspects of it? How can the government now enforce that legal obligation?”
“This is one aspect (of the case) that has not been tackled extensively,” the SOLAIR dean said. 
“The contract of employment of PAL employee is connected to contract of carrier,” he reiterated.

Lunes, Disyembre 12, 2011

Lucio Tan, a.k.a. the Grinch

The Manila Times Logo

Published : Monday, December 12, 2011 00:00    Written by : 




THE season will be less than bright for the 2,600 former regular employees of Philippine Airlines (PAL) who found themselves jobless when the Lucio Tan-owned carrier adopted its so-called outsourcing program last October.

The dismissed regular workers, members of the PAL Employees Association (PALEA), have been replaced by “contractuals” who do the work that PALEA members used to perform, but are hired by other companies contracted by PAL.

The airline owners claimed that they had to resort to outsourcing because PAL has been losing money, insisting that high labor costs were eating away at the airline’s revenue. Of course, they do not mention the fact that the airline management’s decision in 2008 to resort to “fuel hedging” was what really put PAL deep in the red.

In February 2009, PAL president Jaime Bautista was reported to have disclosed that PAL would post its first full-year loss since 2004 primarily because of a hedging program that had been meant to address volatile fuel prices.

In July 2008, crude oil prices skyrocketed to an all-time high of US$147 per barrel but by early 2009 they had dropped to just above US$40. Unfortunately for PAL, its management—which mistakenly assumed that fuel prices would remain high—had locked the carrier to contracts to buy fuel at much higher prices even long after crude costs had begun to drop.

Little information has leaked out of the PAL boardroom as to which company officials were responsible for this costly miscalculation—or if they were penalized at all for a decision that proved financially disastrous for the airline and ultimately its hapless employees.

But instead of owning up to their blunder, the owners and managers of PAL decided to take it out on the ground personnel of the airline—the 2,600 members of PALEA who thereafter began to be portrayed by PAL’s public relations machinery as the biggest financial burden to the company.

Unfortunately for PALEA members, they found no receptive ear in the Department of Labor and Employment and other government agencies as well as Lucio Tan’s “friends” in media. Rather than aggrieved workers, the PALEA members were portrayed as troublemakers who refused to see reason. Eventually, PAL resorted to calling them “terrorists.”

Nearly three months after PALEA members were forced out—literally—of the company’s premises, emotions are still raw. The outrage has not died down, not just among the displaced workers but also members of the general public that now wince every time PAL is described as “the flag carrier.”

Among the staunchest supporters of the victims of PAL’s outsourcing scheme are the Freedom from Debt Coalition (FDC) and other civil society groups. In a recent press statement, these groups called for a boycott of PAL and its bargain airline sister company AirPhil.

“This Christmas break, don’t fly airlines owned by the Grinch,” FDC President Ricardo Reyes told reporters recently. “Because of his greed, Lucio Tan has stolen Christmas of retrenched PAL workers. He acts like the true Grinch.”

Created by Dr. Seuss, the Grinch is a fictional character who first appeared as the main protagonist in the 1957 children’s book, How the Grinch Stole Christmas! Now, it is a term used to describe a person with a coarse and greedy attitude and opposed to Christmas time celebrations.

“It is almost Christmas time—our great Kapaskuhan, a time for families, friends, neighbors, and loved ones to gather, celebrate and share blessings with one another. But not for 2,600 of our kababayan PAL employees and their families who until now face the uncertainty of a prolonged deadlock due to Lucio Tan’s refusal to sit down with PALEA and address their just demands,” said Reyes.

“We are urging the riding public, particularly the students, government and private workers and [overseas Filipino workers (OFWs)] to support the members of PALEA in their struggle against the mass lay-off, contractualization, and their fight to protect their job security. PALEA’s fight is also our fight. As riding customers, we can best support PALEA by hitting Lucio Tan where he hurts most—by not flying PAL and AirPhil, until he sits down with PALEA and address their just demands,” he said. 

Agnes Matienzo of Migrant Forum in Asia (MFA): “In support of the 2,600 PALEA members who are unilaterally locked out and terminated by PAL, MFA continues to call on our fellow OFWs and partners/affiliates in over 16 countries in Asia not to fly PAL this Christmas unless Lucio Tan sits with PALEA and address their demands. PALEA members’ fight is our fight. As migrants’ advocate, we demand host countries to respect the right of our workers overseas to unionize and demand for just wages and job security. How do we expect destination countries to respect and protect the rights of our workers, if the rights of our local workers are blatantly violated? We shall never accept that the rights of our local workers are violated. The interest of 10 million OFWs and the interest of 2,600 PALEA members are one and the same. Boycott PAL and stop corporate greed!”

Max de Mesa, chairman of Philippine Alliance of Human Rights Advocates (PAHRA), said: “PAL workers are co-creators of the wealth of the company. Thus, not only should the quality of life of workers rightfully and proportionately improve as the company develops and grows—this is a collective aspect of the right to development. More important, they should be integral to the company itself. The owner’s and management’s decision to outsource as part of its overall contractualization plan is to deceptively cut off its co-creators of corporate wealth under the false basis of ‘financial losses.’ This is corporate callousness. They have disjointed themselves from the same humanity as their workers so as to accrue profits primarily for themselves. The vaunted plan of separation benefits is no more than a ruse to distract from the truth of corporate greed and the deprivation of workers’ rights.”

Other groups have signed up to the “Don’t Fly PAL/AirPhil” campaign. Whether this boycott will cause Lucio Tan and his underlings to mend their ways—just like another fictional character Mr. Scrooge—by Christmas Day, we’ll find out soon enough.

Frankly, I doubt it.

dansoy26@yahoo.com



Miyerkules, Disyembre 7, 2011

Hire for long term, ILO exec urges companies


By: 


KYOTO, Japan—Think long term.
Companies that want to be successful in the long run should invest in their workers and not just hire contractuals for short-term profit, an International Labor Organization (ILO) expert said Wednesday.
Kee Beom Kim, a ILO employment specialist, said firms that hire regular workers and invest in increasing their productivity are the ones that would eventually emerge “successful and prosperous.”
“We know that the companies that are able to survive for the long term and prosper are those whose employees are productive, are happy, and they have good morale,” Kee said in an interview.
Not good for morale
“Having workers whose contracts are for a very short period of time— that cannot be good either for the morale of those workers or in terms of the investment in those workers,” he said.
Kee is one of the experts at ILO’s 15th Asia and the Pacific Regional Meeting here tackling policies on job protection and economic growth amid the global financial crisis. The meeting attended by labor ministers and other stakeholders from the region ends on Wednesday.
Kee said contractualization was a quick response by companies to globalization, but he emphasized that firms should “think long term.”
“Countries are faced with many pressures as a result of world trade and globalization. These kinds of mechanisms provide companies with a means by which they can address some of these pressures. But having said that, one has to think long term,” he said.
Kee said using contractuals meant lower investment in employee productivity, which would eventually prove detrimental to a company’s interests.
Long term planning
“As a company, if one worker is going to be around for only six months, you have less incentive to invest in the productivity of that worker and providing him with more skills training because you know that after six months he’ll be gone,” Kim said.
He said, however, that long-term planning was a “key challenge for many companies because they’re required to report on their financial operations every quarter in many cases.”

Baldoz defends government’s outsourcing policy at Kyoto meet



KYOTO, Japan—Labor Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz on Wednesday defended the government’s policy on outsourcing at the International Labor Organization regional meeting being held here after an ILO delegate questioned the government’s handling of the labor dispute at Philippine Airlines (PAL).
Baldoz declined, however, to discuss the details of the labor case between PAL and its ground crew union—the PAL Employees Association (Palea)—but emphasized that the government was only making sure that both the rights of management and of labor were respected.
“I would rather that I respond by not discussing the details of the Palea case because this is now pending in our courts and it would be premature and sub judice,” Baldoz said during a panel discussion on workers’ rights and social dialogue.
An ILO delegate had asked her about the labor case, noting that the protesting workers “have been staying in a tent” for more than a month.
PAL laid off 2,600 members of its ground crew in September and outsourced their jobs but Palea questioned their dismissal before the Court of Appeals.
Baldoz said the Constitution recognized both the rights of labor and the prerogatives of management and that the government would step in when abuses happen.
“In our Constitution, there is a body of rights on the workers’ side and on the employers’ side. The right to collective bargaining, right to strike, peaceful concerted activities and security of tenure (for labor) and business’ right to manage and expand their enterprise and get a reasonable return of investment, as long as this is done fair and equitably,” Baldoz said.
“That’s what we look at whenever an issue of outsourcing, which is highly emotional and politicized, comes up,” she added.
Baldoz said that while Philippine law allowed for outsourcing and subcontracting, there “are certain limitations.”
“Outsourcing done by fly-by-night contractors is very much prohibited. Clearly, we now require them to be substantially capitalized. This is the first time this is being done and this a product of tripartite discussions,” she said.
Baldoz said that discussions between government, business and labor had come to the conclusion that “there is legitimate subcontracting.”
“What came out was the recognition of labor groups and management that there is legitimate subcontracting which should be recognized but that this should not be used to circumvent labor laws,” she said.
“Of course, there was also a recognition that some business activities cannot be outsourced. And that (outsourcing) is not a unilateral exercise of management. If there’s a union, there should be a collective negotiation,” she added.

Lunes, Nobyembre 14, 2011

Dapat repormahin ang Labor Code


Out of Order
By Raymond Burgos

Matinding karahasan na ang dinaranas ng mga miyembro ng Philippine Airlines Employees Association (PALEA) sa kanilang isinasagawang protest camp para humanap ng hustisya sa mga kasamahang nawalan ng trabaho dahil sa pag-outsource ng PAL management.
Naganap ang pinakamalalang harassment sa protest camp noong Oktubre 29 kung saan pitong PALEA members ang nasaktan nang salakayin sila ng mga goons ng PAL management na kanilang nakumpirma sa isang goon na kanilang nahuli at umamin na binayaran sila ng management para buwagin ang kanilang hanay.
Dahil dito ay umaapela ang PALEA sa House Committee on Labor na magsagawa ng imbestigasyon sa insidente ng karahasan bilang bahagi ng isinasagawang congressio­nal inquiry sa PAL-PALEA labor dispute.
Bahagi ng panawagan ng PALEA ang pagsusulong ng mga reporma sa Labor Code kung saan nakasaad pa rin ang “free ingress and egress” sa mga nakawelgang pagawaan.
Nais din ng PALEA na mas mabigyan ng ngipin ang anti-scab law dahil na rin sa kanilang karanasan na upahang goons na taga-labas ang ginagamit ng PAL management para buwagin ang kanilang protest camp.
Outsourcing ang dahilan ng PAL sa pagtanggal sa mga regular na empleyado na nagtatrabaho sa airport services, call center reservation at catering department, pero ayon sa PALEA ay taktika lang ito ng management para pahinain ang kanilang unyon.
Lumalabas sa pag-aaral ng PALEA na mga “dummy” lang ng PAL ang mga dapat sana’y independent companies gaya ng Sky Logistics at Sky Kitchen na siya ngayong na­ngangasiwa sa gawain ng mga tinanggal na trabahador.
Labor-only contracting naman ang patakaran ng mga nabanggit na outsourcing companies na ang ibig sabihin ay pa­laging bago ang mga empleyado nito dahil mababa sa anim na buwan ang kontrata ng mga trabahador.
Ang mga isyung nabanggit ay matagal nang inirereklamo ng kilusang paggawa dahil bago ito ipinatupad sa PAL ay marami na ring malalaking kumpanya ang gumagawa nito dahil nga mas matipid (walang 13th month pay at Christmas bonus na babayaran) at walang sakit ng ulo sa unyon.
Kapit sa patalim naman ang nangyayari sa mga pumapayag sa labor-only contracting scheme dahil na rin sa hirap na makahanap ng trabaho na maganda ang pasahod.
Matagal na dapat nagsagawa ng reporma sa Labor Code pero dahil karamihan ng mga mambabatas ay malalaki rin na negosyante kundi man sinuportahan ng mga comprador noong eleksyon ay nananatiling “anti-labor” ang Labor Code.
Ang ibig sabihin ng pagiging “anti-labor” ay mas madalas na talo ang mga nagrereklamong manggagawa sa National Labor Relations Commission na siyang ahensyang dapat sana ay sumbungan ng mga manggagawa na inaabuso ng kanilang employer.
Pero dahil nga mga kapitalista ang may pera at impluwensya ay walang nangyayari sa reklamo ng mga manggagawa kahit pa sila ang nasa katwiran at pinapaboran ng mga probisyon sa Labor Code.
“Pressure politics” na lang ang puwedeng asahan ng mga kagaya ng sinibak na miyembro ng PALEA dahil sa ganitong lenggwahe lang sila maririnig at maiintindihan ng mga kinauukulan, kabilang na ang mga mambabatas at Malacañang.
Puwera na lamang kung may ibang uri ng pakikibaka na naiisip ang liderato at kasapian ng PALEA sakaling hindi makamit ang mga isinusulong na reporma sa Labor Code.

Ex-employee says PAL blocked return from US



MANILA, Philippines—A member of the Philippine Airlines’ Employees Association (Palea) has accused the flag carrier of harassing her and her family when it barred them from boarding a PAL flight back to Manila from the United States last week because she was an active union member.
Bella Savellano, who claimed she and six members of her family were not allowed to board the PAL flight from Los Angeles on Nov. 6, arrived in Manila Saturday and vowed to rejoin Palea’s fight against contractualization.
“It’s good to be back home even after the petty persecution I experienced in the hands of PAL. My husband and children who should have been at work and school early this week, and even my 80-year mother, suffered from PAL’s harassment of its protesting employees,” Savellano said in a joint statement issued by Palea and Partido ng Manggagawa.
Savellano, who worked for PAL for more than 28 years, is one of the retrenched employees protesting PAL’s outsourcing program.
Travel benefit
Savellano and her family flew to the US on Oct. 19 to visit relatives in San Diego using her employee travel benefit that was approved before the labor protest began.
However, on Oct. 23, PAL issued a memo that rendered Savellano’s return ticket useless, according to the statement.
Sought for comment, PAL counsel Clara de Castro said: “Pursuant to company policies, those who committed a wrong or an infraction, to the detriment of the interests of the company, do not have a right to demand benefits. All those involved in the Sept. 27 wildcat strike have been required to explain as part of due process and clearance requirements but many of them never gave any explanation.”
Ian Seruelo, liaison officer of Partido Manggagawa-USA, who assisted Savellano with her fight, said that “the petty persecution was meant to force Savellano to accept the separation offer and sign up with the service provider, which is desperately in need of skilled and experienced workers from Palea.”
“We condemn the violence and other harassment tactics employed by PAL against Palea, said Sevellano. On Oct. 29, goons hired by PAL attacked the Palea protest camp, he added.
On Friday, tension rose anew between Palea members and PAL security guards as a firetruck and scores of policemen accompanied a shuttle bus of the airline into the In-flight Center (IFC).
PAL has accused Palea of hampering the company’s operations as they continue to camp out in front of the In-flight Center.
Settle differences
Meanwhile, tourism and travel industry leaders urged PAL and Palea to settle their differences, saying the disturbances were affecting the flying public and discouraging foreign visitors and prospective investors.
Robert Lim Joseph, chair of Tourism Educators and Movers Philippines (Team Philippines), said the stand-off was not serving the country’s interest.
Joseph said that while workers have a right to strike, they should not hamper the operations of PAL.
He said the government should resolutely step in to prevent trouble in the picket. He called on the police to be physically present at the picket area—not to drive away the picketing workers but to prevent trouble.
“We should allow PAL to continue to maintain its service standard as this reflects on the country being the flag carrier,” Joseph said.
Former Tourism Undersecretary Oscar Palabyab and former Foreign Undersecretary Franklin Ebdalin also said the government should protect travelers by imposing order in the area occupied by striking former PAL employees.
Palabyab said that while PAL had its lawyers and the striking workers had the support of labor groups, the travelers were left to fend for themselves.
Ebdalin expressed concern the disagreement between PAL and its former workers would discourage foreign travelers and would affect potential investors in case PAL closes.

Linggo, Nobyembre 13, 2011

PAL row, Occupy Wall Street

Rebuild crumbling social contract
By: 


At the core of the conflict between Philippine Airlines (PAL) and PAL Employees Association (Palea) is the effort of the airline to manage business freely with maximum flexibility, including its contested prerogative to outsource jobs done by regular and unionized workers.  PAL says outsourcing is a legitimate weapon in insuring its own business survival in the fiercely competitive deregulated aviation market.
On the other hand, Palea has raised a legal and moral issue:  Should workers who have served the airline faithfully for 10, 20 or 25 years be given the golden handshake just like that—all in the name of “management prerogative?” Must this prerogative prevail over the workers’ rights to job security, freedom of association and collective bargaining, all of which are guaranteed by the 1987 Constitution?
Eroding respect
The truth is that the PAL-Palea conflict reflects a bigger reality dividing workers and employers globally—the eroding respect accorded by industry to workers’ rights. Organizers of the “Occupy Wall Street” movement in the United States sum it up by asking: Why is their government bailing out the “too big to fail” such as the big bankers who precipitated the financial crisis and not the workers who have been displaced by the crisis?
In Europe, the question is sharper: Why are their leaders engineering an economic recovery by downsizing workers’ pensions and imposing severe social and economic austerity?  And yet, ironically, America and Europe continue to sink into the economic black hole because the disintegrating social contract means endless strikes and instabilities as illustrated by the bankrupt Greece and now Italy.
Development of industry-labor social contract  What is this social contract? A little bit of history is in order. The history of Europe and America in the 18th and 19th centuries was one of ceaseless class conflicts, fueled by the widespread exploitation of workers. Work lasting 14 to 16 hours was considered normal, while workers’ organizations were banned under “anti-combination” laws.
The convenors of the Treaty of Versailles, which ended World War I, knew that the world would neither be safe nor stable if governments would continue ignoring workers’ rights, especially in the wake of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution in Russia.  Hence, in 1919, a tripartite International Labor Organization (ILO) was established to promote “universal and lasting peace… based upon social justice.”
Among the early policy prescriptions advanced by the ILO were the regulation of work hours, worker protection against old age and occupational injury, recognition of the principle of “equal remuneration for work of equal value” and freedom of association.
However, the foregoing ILO precepts had to be legislated on a country by country basis. In the United States, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt used the Great Depression of 1929-1933 as the opportunity to institutionalize them.  His “New Deal” program, revolving around job creation via infrastructure development, was accompanied by bold social reform measures  strengthening workers rights, e.g.  laws on minimum wage, prohibition of child labor, trade union right to bargain and federal pension system covering all American workers.
The National Labor Relations Act of 1935 forced employers to bargain in good faith with the unions. Thus, the trade union membership shot up, from 3.6 million in 1935 to 8.6 million in 1941. At the same time, the American economy recovered, spurred by Keynesian-style government spending and stabilized by the social contract forged by Roosevelt with the unions and employers.
After World War II, the leaders of Germany, France, United Kingdom, Scandinavia, Japan and Canada even went further. They built the postwar “welfare states,” which enshrined workers’ rights in their legal systems (including “codetermination” at the work place), established a universal health and social security system, and provided survival benefits for the unemployed.
Social contract in the Philippines President Manuel Quezon,  emulating Roosevelt’s New Deal developmental politics, tried to arrest the politicio-economic crisis in the red decade of the 1930s by proclaiming a “Social Justice” program.  The program included land colonization and resettlement programs for the landless peasants, the passage of the eight-hour labor law, creation of the Government Service Insurance System and, to redress workers’ grievances, the establishment of the Court of Industrial Relations.
A decade after, the US Embassy assisted the administration of President Ramon Magsaysay in augmenting these measures as part of the government’s campaign to contain communist insurgency and labor militancy. The embassy helped draft the Minimum Wage Act of 1952, the Industrial Peace Act (IPA) of 1953 and the Social Security Act of 1954.
The IPA, which recognized the right of workers to form unions for the purpose of bargaining on conditions and terms of work, was considered a landmark legislation in a relatively underdeveloped economy. A carbon copy of the US law, the IPA penalized employers’ refusal to bargain and to subvert unionism and collective bargaining as “unfair labor practices.”
All these protective labor laws helped stabilize the Philippine industrial relations system through the decades of the 1950s and 1960s, which happened to be high-growth decades in terms of industrial development and union formation.  Even the original minimum wage of P4 a day, passionately opposed by the employers then, became a nonissue as CBA wages immediately surpassed it in the fast-growing industrial sector.
Later, the Department of Labor and Employment codified all these protective labor laws into the Labor Code of the Philippines and elevated tripartite (employer-union-government) consultation as the governing principle in labor policy formulation and implementation.
Crumbling social contract  But a neoliberal shift in economic governance in the 1980s began eroding the social contract in the Philippines and other capitalist countries. All of a sudden, protective labor laws such as the minimum wage, unionism and even social security were viewed as unwanted “rigidities” in a liberalized global economy. Capital started crossing national borders in search of the cheap, malleable (nonunionized) and productive labor. Countries with open economies and with lax or “flexible” labor laws were hailed as models in attracting foreign investments and creating employment.
However, what was not factored in this global race to the bottom   is the resulting global contradiction—the overproduction of goods and services and underconsumption of the same because of the reduced purchasing power of the marginalized workers and farmers who produced these goods and services for the global market. The situation is compounded by the growth of the unregulated financial markets, which spawned unproductive investments and speculations, asset bubbles and busts, right in the heart of global capitalism, at Wall Street. All these fuel social and labor conflicts in many parts of the world.
Ironically, the G20 is still unable to grapple with these realities and contradictions. Nicolas Sarkozy has declared a “Noveau Monde” movement propelled by G20, and yet his G20 has not come up with no “new ideas” except for more funding for the International Monetary Fund and new reserve requirements for the big banks. Above all, the G20 has not come up with concrete measures to end the massive inequalities and injustices under globalization that are at the roots of the Arab Spring, London riots and the Occupy Wall Street movement that has gone global. (See boxed story on this page.) Worse, some of the G20 measures such as the downsizing of employment and social security deepen these inequalities and the sense of injustice felt by many workers and citizens in developed countries.
Back to the PAL-Palea dispute  But back to the social contract in the Philippines, the PAL-Palea dispute has brought to the fore the issue of “management prerogative,” which is hotly debated today in the national industrial tripartite council and in the national legislature. As defined, management prerogative is the right of employers to manage business freely as they see fit, for after all, they are the investors-owners.
However, should the principle of management prerogative prevail when the workers’ rights are directly affected?  In the case of PAL, its outsourcing decision is premised on the need for PAL to be more competitive in an industry where competitors are allegedly maintaining only a small pool of regulars for everything else is outsourced. The problem is that the 2,600 jobs affected by the outsourcing decision (those deployed in the reservations, catering and ground crew services) are occupied by workers with regular job status and are full-pledged members of the Palea union.
Palea correctly points out that the Labor Code explicitly guarantees the rights of workers to have regular job status, to become members of the union and to be covered by the union’s CBA with the company.  And yet, the Supreme Court, in a series of decisions, has upheld the prerogative of employers to regulate “all aspects of employment” and to reorganize business as they see fit, including mergers, spin-offs, rightsizings, etc. The only limitations to the exercise of this prerogative  are existing laws, legal contracts, and observance of due process and principles of fair play, justice and good faith.
Failure of dialogue
There is no space to discuss here the legal merits and demerits of the celebrated PAL-Palea dispute, which is now pending in the Court of Appeals. The point is that this dispute illustrates the sad failure of social dialogue, which is at the heart of rule setting in modern industrial relations and in forging a mutually acceptable social contract.  After all, a labor dispute, especially in a big enterprise such as PAL, is a relationship issue, which can not be settled by merely going the legal route or worse, closure route (as what the Qantas management in Australia tried to do tactically).
The 1987 Constitution also has a wise counsel: “The State shall promote the principle of shared responsibility between workers and employers” in their relationships, especially in the use of voluntary modes of dispute settlement in order to have “industrial peace.”
How then does one promote social dialogue and the principle of shared responsibility in industrial relations when the economic rules under globalization tend to favor a global race to the bottom, that is, encouraging competing employers to seek union-free and flexible work arrangements? And yet, as history shows and what the endless social and labor conflicts in America and Europe are now revealing, such a race to the bottom is simply unsustainable.
Toward a new social contract The challenge to the Philippine and other governments today is how to persuade all industry stakeholders to sit down and forge a new social contract fit for the new millennium. Such a contract cannot be forged without addressing the inequities generated by a one-sided system of economic globalization. Hence, the need for a new global social compact addressing the issues raised by the global Occupy Wall Street movement. Without reforms in global and national economic governance, there will never be peace and development.
In the Philippines, it is time that the members of the tripartite council tackle not only the various provisions and implementing rules of the Labor Code but also the terms of Philippine incorporation in an increasingly divided and unequal global economic order.
(Rene E. Ofreneo, Ph. D., is a professor at the UP School of Labor and Industrial Relations. This article is based on a talk he delivered at a recent meeting of the Rotary Club of Pasig.)