Accra, May 4, Ghanadot - Labour unions in thousands of countries around the world are
using the traditional May Day marches to protest the
handling of the current global economic crisis.
The crisis has
led to loss of jobs, close down of key companies
and factories in the advance world,
and is causing the developing
countries to face up to the reality of a
severe down turn in their economies.
At the recent workers day
celebrations, the central theme that went through all the
marches and protests was the need for government to take
workers’ welfare seriously at a time when the global economy is
hard hit.
The thinking from some Ghanaian is that although
workers have right to good working conditions and other good
welfare programmes, they would have
to exercise restraint now that the
economy is under duress.
In Ghana, the Trades Union Congress (TUC) and other cohort
labour organizations were not left out of
the celebrations.
The Ghanaian workers urged the government as a matter of urgency
to expedite action on the implementation of the country’s
long-awaited Single Spine Salary Structure (SSSS).
They also called for the re-introduction of the end-service
benefits for all workers in the country.
The Secretary-General of TUC, Mr. Kofi Asamoah further
asked the government to implement the
new pension scheme set up under the new National Pension Law
2008.
Amazingly, many Ghanaians spend about 70% of their lives working
but received “take-home pay that cannot take them home”, while
the principle of equal treatment for equal opportunities for all
is regularly violated, with women being the greatest victims.
Even at the Independence Square, where President John Evans Atta
Mills and his Vice John Dramani Mahama joined
the celebrations, awards given
went to the men
mostly, leaving out the women.
In reality women workers do more work than their men
counterparts but men use their domineering power to cheat them
of the recognition. The May Day awards, some say, was a
case in point.
It is therefore incumbent on the government to implement the
"SSSS" scheme and
to integrate the principle of equal pay for equal work in
both the pubic and sectors of the Ghanaian economy,
the TUC boss was reported to have said.
The TUC boss also added that “the patience of public
sector workers is almost exhausted” after waiting for too long
for the implementation of the scheme.
Indeed, the recent increase in the minimum wage is largely
nominal if account is taken of the rate of depreciation of the
country’s cedi against the major currencies such as US Dollar
and Pound Sterling.
Our beloved country is likely to experience a significant fall
in real wages this year. This has serious implications for the
decent work agenda that Ghanaians are yearning for.
Commenting on the current wages and salaries of the Ghanaian
workers, President Mills assured them that the government
was providing adequate funds and logistics to Ghana’s Fair Wages
and Salaries Commission to execute its mandate in anticipation
of the implementation of the "SSSS"
structure.
“Let me assure you that the single spine pay policy remains high
on our agenda”, he added.
Also, responding to demands for more job opportunities by the
Ghanaian workers, the president indicated that his government’s
social contract with Ghanaians was built on the firm belief that
the people had a right to decent living and well paid jobs,
adding “we intend to promote and create employment avenues in
all sectors of the country”.
President Mills assured the gathering that government was
committed to the creation of jobs in the economic and productive
sectors such as agriculture, trade and industry and tourism.
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