EDITORIAL: Welcome to
Fantasy Island
It is rare that the head of one branch of the government should directly attack
the head of another branch, but that is what Control Yuan President Wang
Chien-shien did last week, when he said President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) ran the
risk of turning himself into one of the most incompetent presidents in history.
And that was even before the Cabinet gave the thumbs-down to the Council of
Labor Affairs’ proposal to increase the minimum wage and then set absurd
criteria for raising it.
Wang wrote in an article that bureaucratic mindlessness was defining Ma’s
legacy, citing as an example Ministry of the Interior officials who kept
insisting that care centers for vegetative patients with 60 or more patients
meet the minimum requirement of one bathroom for every six patients to be
licensed, even though patients in vegetative states cannot use bathrooms. It
took years of petitioning from concerned families before the officials finally
agreed to accept reality and reduce the number of required bathrooms.
As president and the person who had chosen the head of the interior ministry and
other Cabinet agencies, the buck stopped with Ma, Wang implied.
Even if you cannot fault Ma for the ineptness of lower-level ministry staffers,
he certainly can be held accountable for the appointment of Premier Sean Chen
and, therefore, the minimum wage ruling.
That same inability to accept reality that created a logjam in the interior
ministry also tainted the Cabinet’s decision on Wednesday to put off a plan to
raise the minimum monthly wage by NT$267. Chen said the minimum wage would be
raised only if GDP grows by more than 3 percent for two quarters in a row or the
unemployment rate drops below 4 percent for two consecutive months.
Welcome to Fantasy Island — you can guess who is playing the role of Ricardo
Montalban and who is guesting as Herve Villechaize this year. However, unlike on
Fantasy Island, dreams rarely come true here. This is the island where
government officials like to make expansive promises about the nation becoming
some kind of Asian-Pacific hub that will outperform its neighbors and wow
investors enough that they will want to set up headquarters — and continue to
make such promises (though with different hubs) despite years of not being able
to meet a single goal. They keep waiting for the next planeload of visitors to
arrive to make those dreams come true — even though planeloads of Chinese
tourists have yet to boost the economy as promised.
Taiwan is having a hard time keeping its GDP growth above 1 percent right now,
while the unemployment rate during Ma’s time in office has never gone below the
4 percent mark, so 3 percent GDP growth truly looks like a fantasy right now.
Chen said he was confident that the conditions could be met, even though he was
not willing to set a timeframe and few outside the government appear as
optimistic. He said the decision was made after considering “all factors,” but
it seems as if the only factors that counted were those put forth by big
business.
And if that were not enough for Taiwan’s beleaguered working class, hot on the
heels of the minimum wage announcement came the news that the government is
planning to relax restrictions on the recruitment of foreign workers to help
revive the economy. The one who made that announcement was Minister Without
Portfolio Kuan Chung-ming (管中閔), who just happens to be one of two men charged
by Chen to review the minimum monthly wage proposal and who said it should be
deferred until the economy was better. It goes without saying that the foreign
worker plan includes the stipulation that they not be subject to the minimum
monthly wage rule as stipulated in the Labor Standards Act (勞動基準法).
The Democratic Progressive Party has said it was considering reporting the
Cabinet to the Control Yuan over the minimum wage ruling. It should. At least
there is one avenue of appeal for that, but what about all the other misguided
policies being fronted by Ma and Chen? Their fantasy island risks sinking
beneath the waves before they wake up to reality — and taking us all down with
it, one worker at a time.
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