Monthly Archives: January 2009

Bosses Question Minimum Wage

Honduran union leaders and government authorities questioned the decision of some representatives of the business sector to impugn the new minimum wage.

The Minister of Labor, Mayra Mejia, criticized the determination of members of the Honduran Council of Private Enterprise (COHEP) and considered that business executives should understand the cost of the basic food basket that is higher even than what had been considered during the government of Manuel Zelaya.

Before ratifying the state decree on December 24 of 2008 the minimum wage in Honduras was approximately 180 dollars (3,400 lempiras) and as a result of the decree it rose to 5,500 lempiras (about 292 dollars).

Despite the benefits this increase represents for the workers it is still below the total cost of the basic basket in this Central American nation that is equivalent to 6,200 lempiras (more than 328 dollars) according the El Heraldo newspaper.

The paper reported that about 60 businesses affiliated to COHEP announced that they would challenge as false the new minimum wage approved by the president.

According to a legal advisor to the association, Armando Urtecho, the directors of the group presented a demand to the Supreme Court of Justice but each entity requested rectification of the state decree that should be left to individual decisions.

The executive director of COHEP, Benjamin Bogran warned that by the end of the month at least 40,000 would be laid off, especially in the informal sector and intended to justify this action to the increased salary demands by the State.

For Bogran it would have been better to count on the possibility of agreeing to a percentage point increase with the workers as proposed last Tuesday to prevent massive layoffs.

As a result of the decree of the Zelaya administration, business persons cannot negotiate with workers who receive lower salaries than those established and by paying them less they face a violation of their rights.

Wage Increase Controversy

Honduras’ leftist president has raised the minimum wage in urban areas by about 60 percent, but businesses say they cannot afford to pay it.

President Manuel Zelaya set the new rate after talks broke down with business leaders. The increase in monthly wages from $181 to $289 went into effect this month.

Amilcar Bulnes is president of the country’s Private Business Chamber. He says that businesses do not have the resources to cover the added costs.

Bulnes said Tuesday the hike has already led to 15,000 layoffs.

The president also raised the minimum wage in rural areas by 18 percent.

Previously, the wage has not gone up by more than 10 percent.

Zelaya has not said what will happen if businesses don’t comply.

Minimum Wage Increase Bad for Economy

The economic outlook for Honduras this year is far from bright. The government has failed in its attempts to sign a new letter of intent with the IMF, and growth is expected to slow down due to the global financial crisis, according to analysts consulted.

In its three years in office, the government of centre-left President Manuel Zelaya has been unable to negotiate a new agreement with the IMF (International Monetary Fund), which has blocked access to other sources of credit.

Up to now, relations with the international lender had been limited to stand-by loans, which come with conditions attached, such as public spending cuts, deregulation, privatization, and greater transparency and accountability.

The government has not yet announced a plan to curb the impact of the global crisis, although the authorities have said that it will not be “fatal.”

On Dec. 23, Zelaya announced an increase in the minimum monthly wage, from 157 to 289 dollars, as of Jan. 1, except in the “maquiladora” plants that operate in duty-free zones for the assembly of exports, which he left free to negotiate with their workers.

The government increased the minimum wage by decree after it failed to bring about an agreement between workers and business, as stipulated by the country’s labour laws.

According to Zelaya, the hike in the minimum wage “will force the business oligarchy to start paying what is fair.” He added, however, that “I am aware it must be raised even further.”

“This is a government of great social transformations, committed to the poor,” he stated.

Honduras is one of the poorest countries in Latin America, with a poverty rate of 70 percent according to the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB).

While trade unions celebrated the news of the minimum wage increase, the business community was outraged, and announced massive layoffs for 2009, as well as price hikes.

“We are not opposed to a decent wage, but we believe it should have been the product of a negotiated agreement,” Guillermo Matamoros, a financial analyst with the Honduran Council of Private Enterprise (COHEP), stated.

Matamoros complained that the measure was imposed on the business community. “We should have been consulted. It would seem that the government has forgotten that we are on the threshold of a recession, which in fact is already affecting us.

“The sectors hardest hit by this demagogic, populist measure are medium and small companies, which are denied the right to grow and compete,” he said. “This year alone (2008), more than 15,000 people have been laid off, above all in the maquiladoras. Just imagine what lies ahead in 2009. Dismissals are inevitable.”

“This decision is going to hit us hard,” Elmer Sierra, a medium-sized producer of shrimp from southern Honduras, said, “There are no funds to stimulate production. The price of shrimp has fallen, and the only news from the banks is the hikes in the interest rate. I have tried to work out the numbers to avoid laying anyone off, but it seems impossible.”

Ela Ochoa, who owns a small clinic on the southeast side of Tegucigalpa, has three employees, who she pays more than the current minimum wage.

“With the new increase, I just can’t manage it. I’ll have to lay one of them off, and that is really painful because they are single mothers. Every night, I go over the numbers, but the government hasn’t left me any other option, because besides the increase, I’ll have to pay the workers’ rights (such as social security) required by law,” she said.

Private business associations announced on Dec. 29 that they would challenge the government decree in the Supreme Court.

Labor Minister Mayra Mejía called the critics in the business sector “greedy exploiters.”

Trade unions have announced that they will take to the streets to support the wage increase.

The tension over the minimum wage raise is not good “and promises nothing positive for the country,” said economy Professor Julio Raudales. “This is just one more ingredient in a grim outlook we are facing on the economic and financial fronts, the product of erratic internal actions and the global crisis.”

Raudales said the increase in wages and subsidies assigned by the government in 2008 to workers and farmers, among other sectors, lacked a “rational focus.”

“They only reflect how bad our finances are going. Everything indicates that Hondurans have not learned to save up in boom times and continue squandering money madly,” he said.

The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) estimates that Honduras’s GDP grew 3.8 percent in 2008 and projects two percent growth for 2009, in contrast with the 6.3 percent growth forecast when the current government took office in 2006.

The regional United Nations agency also predicted a fall in remittances from abroad and a drop in revenues from tourism and non-traditional exports.

The Central American Bank for Economic Integration (BCIE) forecasts an increase in the fiscal deficit, a fall in foreign investment and heavy pressure on the country’s foreign reserves.

Central Bank president Edwin Araque said that these predictions are “a bit fatalistic, and things are not really that bad.”

“The global crisis will not hit us so hard. We are studying countercyclical actions against the crisis,” he said.

But Raudales said the government was “naïve” to talk about countercyclical measures.

According to international reports, he said, “the countries that are prepared to confront the crisis, because they saved up in boom periods, are Chile, Brazil and Mexico, while Honduras, Nicaragua, Argentina, Ecuador and Venezuela will have to pay the consequences” of their spending.

The country’s foreign debt of more than four billion dollars was written off five years ago. But according to Mauricio Díaz, coordinator of the Honduran Social Forum on Foreign Debt and Development, everything indicates that the current government has run the debt back up to above that amount.

The Forum said the current level of debt could be “similar to or greater than what was pardoned.”

“We are in bad shape, and the highest level of debt now is internal,” Díaz stated.

By Thelma Mejía