Philippine Metalworkers' Alliance

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PMA
Founded9 November 2003
Location
Members
13,000[1]
Key people
Reynaldo Rasing, General Secretary
AffiliationsSENTRO, IndustriALL
Websitepmaunions.wordpress.com

The Philippine Metalworkers' Alliance (PMA) is a trade union federation of metal workers in the Philippines. This includes workers in the automotive, electrical and electronics, iron, steel and shipbuilding sectors. PMA has 25 affiliated unions and is itself affiliated with the Sentro ng mga Nagkakaisa at Progresibong Manggagawa and IndustriALL Global Union.[2]

History[edit]

PMA was founded on November 9, 2003, and was formally registered as a national organisation on May 13, 2008.[3]

In 2019, PMA filed a safeguard measure against the import of cars into the Philippines with the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). The federation said that a rise in imports had led to the loss of jobs in the car-building sector. Car companies did not take part in the filing.[1]

In January 2021, the PMA's petition resulted in the DTI imposing new temporary customs duties on imported cars until the Tariff Commission made a permanent decision.[4] PMA welcomed the decision, but the Chamber of Automobile Manufacturers of the Philippines claimed the new rules would have a negative effect on the industry.[5] The Manila Times also condemned the new tariff.[6] At preliminary hearings organised by the Tariff Commission in February, car companies including Mitsubishi, Toyota and Isuzu as well as the Philippine distributors of Mazda, Fuso and Geely questioned PMA's right to speak on behalf of the Filippino car industry.[7][8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Roy Stephen C. Canivel (2019-11-11). "Labor group seeks safeguard duty on imported vehicles". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  2. ^ "Philippine Metalworkers' Alliance PMA. About". PMA.
  3. ^ "Philippine Metalworkers' Alliance" (PDF). Global Labour University Alumni Network.
  4. ^ Ralf Rivas (2021-01-05). "Philippines slaps new taxes on car imports to help local players". Rappler.
  5. ^ Othel V. Campos (2021-01-12). "Safeguard duties on imported vehicles to preserve local jobs, says group". Manila Standard.
  6. ^ "New vehicle tariff a thoughtless, economically harmful move". The Manila Times. 2021-01-09.
  7. ^ Bernie Cahiles-Magkilat (2021-02-18). "Top legal teams gang up on auto workers union". Manila Bulletin.
  8. ^ Bernie Cahiles-Magkilat (2021-02-24). "Workers tell auto importers: We are legitimate industry stakeholder". Manila Bulletin.