Pillars of PH economy: Legarda lauds unwavering sacrifice of OFWs


At a glance

  • Senate President Pro Tempore Loren Legarda expressed her deepest gratitude to Filipino migrant workers for their unwavering sacrifices, as she vowed to remain steadfast in the commitment to advance legislation that champions the rights of the sector.


Senate President Pro Tempore Loren Legarda expressed her deepest gratitude to Filipino migrant workers for their unwavering sacrifices, as she vowed to remain steadfast in the commitment to advance legislation that champions the rights of the sector. 

"Countless miles away from their families, they toil night and day to provide a better and more sustainable future for their brood, in turn, their dollar remittances provide vital numbers to our economy, which in turn in trickle-down effects, make our lives better," Legarda said in a statement on Thursday, Dec. 21.

The senator stated that as a lawmaker, she advocated for the protection and welfare of "our modern heroes".

She championed the enactment of the OFW Remittance Protection Act of 2022, which safeguards the foreign remittances of overseas Filipino workers (OFW) without prejudicing the interests of financial intermediaries, both bank and non-bank.

"Our commitment to them does not end with their employment but I have sought to protect them through retirement as well. Through the Social Security Act, both land and sea-based OFWs now enjoy compulsory SSS coverage; it gives them another income channel after their years of hard work," she said.

Legarda also mentioned that she co-authored a law establishing the Office for Social Welfare Attaché. 

This institution now effectively assists and manages cases involving distressed OFWs, victims of trafficking, and abandoned children.

"Even as they reside far from the Philippines, I have worked to ensure that our OFWs have a voice in local political affairs through the enactment of the Overseas Absentee Voting Act of 2003," she said.

Currently awaiting the signature of the President is the proposed Magna Carta for Seafarers law, which aims to secure Filipino seamen's rights to decent, just, and humane conditions aboard sea-going vessels, and sets guidelines for their training and education, overseas employment, and retirement.

Legarda said that she also sought to look out for the Filipino diaspora in various countries throughout the world via the numerous treaties that she has sponsored as then-chairperson of the Committee on Foreign Relations in the Senate.

"Among these are the opening of embassies in Denmark, Morocco, and Sweden; and consulates in Frankfurt, Germany; Houston, Texas in the USA; Barcelona, Spain; Nagoya, Japan; Istanbul, Turkey; and Melbourne, Australia during the 17th Congress," she said.

"I sponsored the concurrence of treaties pertaining to the improvement of the conditions of our seafarers, and domestic workers such as the Maritime Labour Convention, International Labour Organization (ILO) Convention 189, and Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty with countries such as Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the People's Republic of China. During this 19th Congress," she added.

Legarda said that she also co-sponsored the concurrence of ILO 190. She recognized everyone's right to a world of work free from violence and harassment, including gender-based violence and harassment.

On the commitment to facilitating economic growth by eliminating the barriers posed by dual taxation, she also sponsored the double taxation avoidance for Filipino workers in countries such as Kuwait, Qatar, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Mexico during the 17th Congress, and co-sponsored this present Congress the double taxation avoidance to Filipino workers in Brunei.

She sponsored social security agreements between the Philippines and the countries of Spain, Sweden, and Germany during the 17th Congress. In the current 19th Congress, she co-sponsored the social security agreement between the Philippines and the Republic of Korea--thus affirming her dedication to providing a safety net for Filipino citizens.