A worker arranges steel bars at a construction site in Manila, April 17, 2015. 鈥 REUTERS/ROMEO RANOCO

SENATE President Juan Miguel F. Zubiri on Thursday asked Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. to consider certifying as urgent the P100 minimum wage hike bill for private sector workers, saying it would help workers cope with spiraling prices.

鈥淚 also urgently appeal to our President to consider Senate Bill No. 2534, or the [proposed] P100 Daily Minimum Wage Increase Act, which will be a massive step toward giving our hardworking laborers the living wages that they deserve,鈥 he said in a statement.

鈥淧erhaps it can even be certified as urgent, given the continued spike in the prices of goods owing to inflation.鈥

The Senate passed the bill on final reading in February, amid warnings that a hike that is too high could fan inflation. It has been sent to the House of Representatives for its consideration.

There are also separate House bills that seek to increase minimum wages by P150 to P750, and another that mandates a P33,000-a-month entry wage for government workers.

鈥淎ll we need is the House counterpart measure, and this will be immediately felt across the sector,鈥 Mr. Zubiri said.

Under the Constitution, a president can only certify a bill as urgent if there is a public emergency or calamity that requires its immediate passage.

Mr. Marcos on Wednesday ordered regional wage boards to review minimum wage rates amid rising costs of living.

He said the boards should consider inflation and other economic challenges when reviewing wages.

鈥淭he rise of involuntary hunger is truly concerning and disheartening,鈥 Senate Majority Leader Emmanuel Joel J. Villanueva said in a statement. 鈥淭wo things that the government needs to address鈥 are inflation and wages.鈥

Metro Manila鈥檚 daily minimum wage rose by P40 to P610 in June, much lower than the P570 increase sought by some labor groups.

The International Labour Organization has said the erosion of real wages and living standards by runaway inflation and housing costs globally is unlikely to be addressed or offset this year.

鈥淚t is essential to make timely adjustments to the minimum wage to safeguard the economic well-being of our labor force and promote social justice,鈥 Senator Jose 鈥淛inggoy鈥 P. Estrada, who sponsored the Senate wage hike bill, said in a statement.

National Economic and Development Authority Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan has warned that proposals to legislate a P150 wage聽hike could stoke inflation.

Inflation quickened for the second straight month to 3.7% in March from 3.4% a month earlier.

鈥淥ur inflation rates are continuing to trend upward, at a rate that the wage boards have not yet been able to keep up with,鈥 Mr. Zubiri said. 鈥淭his bill will give a boost to the labor sector at this time of great need, as our people work to survive inflation.鈥

Meanwhile, the House is carefully studying legislated wage increases to prevent business closures, Isabela Rep. Faustino A. Dy told a news briefing.

Congressmen want to balance the interests of workers and businesses and ensure any wage hikes are sustainable, he added.

鈥淚t鈥檚 something that really needs to be studied thoroughly,鈥 Mr. Dy said. 鈥淚t really needs a proper balance because we don鈥檛 want to sacrifice businessmen.鈥

鈥淎t the end of the day, we want employment, and we want businesses to create more jobs,鈥 he added.聽

Party-list Rep. Jude A. Acidre said Congress should rationalize wages per industry instead of legislating wage increases, which he said companies might not be able to absorb.

鈥淚鈥檓 proposing that we study the possibility of rationalizing wage levels on the basis of industry and not on the basis of the regions,鈥 he said. 鈥 John Victor D. 翱谤诲辞帽别锄 and Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio