Yesterday, President Nicolas Maduro announced a 30% increase in the minimum wage and pensions. For the first time, the Bolivarian government’s May Day increase is less than annual inflation, which was at 57.3% in February, with March experiencing 4.1% inflation.

The minimum wage will now be Bs 4,252, or Bs 5,602 when food allowances are included. If the 10% increase applied in January were included, the total increase for 2014 would be 43%.

Maduro said he would evaluate a further increase in the last quarter of this year. Unlike previous years, the 30% increase will be applied on 1 May, rather than being broken up and applied incrementally. Other wage levels should be adjusted based on the new minimum wage.

Maduro expressed confidence however, that the inflation rate would slow down, following his recent meetings with “businesses who want to produce”.

He said, “I trust in the good policies that we are implementing, and that by the end of this year we will be overcoming, strangling, the perverse inflation induced [by economic sabotage] and we will have a good balance in the prices of products and services”.

The president made the announcement during a peace conference meeting with worker representatives. There, he also announced other measures, including the creation of a presidential commission to enforce the work law, passed two years ago. The work law provided workers with a range of rights; it made outsourcing illegal, awarded paternity leave and longer maternity leave, the right to workplace childcare, transport to work, made it harder for workers to be fired, and more. Maduro said he hoped to “end with outsourcing” by next year.

Maduro also announced that the work ministry will now be called the Ministry for Protection of the Social Process of Work. He said the name change was part of “a permanent renovation of the social structures, of the government”.

Opposition governor of Miranda state Henrique Capriles, said the wage increase was “lacking” and that “with this inflation… it doesn’t improve the conditions of our workers”. He blamed the government for the current high inflation rates.

However, last night Maduro commented on opposition leader demands for a higher wage increase, saying, “they propose things that they know they would never implement if they were in the [national] government, because they don’t even fulfil the collective contracts where they are governors and mayors… they don’t have the right to talk because they have never earned a salary with the sweat of their work and efforts, this bourgeoisie don’t know anything about it”.

The president of Venezuela’s chamber of commerce, Fedecamaras, Jorge Roig said the chamber was “consulted sufficiently in advance” about the wage adjustment, and had “hoped it would be moderate”. Roig said the increase was “responsible”.

Maduro called on people to march on May Day, “The first of May we’re invited to a large national mobilisation… if the world wants to see who the working class stand with, they should open their eyes on May Day so they can see that the working class is with the Bolivarian revolution”.

 


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Tamara Pearson is an Australian-Mexican journalist, editor, activist, and literary fiction author. Her latest novel is The Eyes of the Earth, and she writes the Global South newsletter, Excluded Headlines.

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