How Much Is Enough to Live?:
The Wage, the Vendor, and the Myth of Resilience
There is a question that must be asked plainly, without the varnish of official speeches and without the sentimental music that often accompanies Labor Day commemorations: how much is enough for a worker to live?
Is it ten? Is it thirty? Is it twenty-five? Is it fifty? Is it the minimum decreed by a regional wage board, or the amount grudgingly adjusted after years of inflation have already eaten its meaning? Is it enough because a government office says so, or because a worker can actually live on it? Is it enough because an employer can pay it, or because a family can survive it? These are not academic questions. They are not questions for economists alone, nor for politicians who speak of labor only on May 1. They are questions that belong to the worker who has to buy rice, pay rent, commute to work, keep children in school, and still hope there is something left in the envelope before the next payday.
A wage is not merely a number. It is a judgment about what society thinks a human being is worth. It is the price society places on time, strength, skill, discipline, endurance, and the slow wearing down of the body. When the wage is too low, the problem is not only poverty. The problem is insult. It means that the person who gives his day, his muscles, his alertness, his patience, and often his health is told that all of this is worth barely enough to keep him alive until the next shift.
This is why the question of wages cannot be separated from dignity. The worker does not merely need money in the abstract. He needs enough to live as a person and not merely as an instrument of production. She needs enough to buy food without begging, travel to work without debt, raise children without terror, and rest without wondering which bill must be sacrificed. A wage that only allows survival is not a living wage. It is a ration. It is maintenance money for a human machine.
One sees this most clearly in places where labor is not a metaphor but an atmosphere. Imagine those who grew up near a sugar central. The factory is not simply a workplace; it is a presence. Its schedules shape the day. Its sirens mark time. Its smoke, heat, and smell enter the memory of childhood. There are workers who report from seven in the morning until five in the afternoon. Others enter the rotating discipline of industrial shifts: 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., 3 p.m. to 11 p.m., 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. Eight hours, yes, but eight hours under conditions that drain the body. Eight hours repeated over years, with the same roads, the same uniforms, the same gates, the same fatigue, the same wages that disappear before the next payday.
The official mind may call this employment. The worker calls it life. The employer may call it manpower. The household calls it rice, fare, tuition, medicine, and debt. The economist may call it labor input. The worker knows it as the ache in the back, the heat on the skin, the noise in the ears, the shortened temper, the missed family meal, and the quiet fear that after all this work, one still has not earned enough.
And yet, for such work, many are paid pittances. The wage is small, but the demands are not. The worker is expected to be punctual, obedient, productive, efficient, patient, grateful, and silent. The worker must endure the discipline of time, the pressure of management, the instability of prices, the judgment of society, and the lectures of those who have never had to live on such pay. Then, after all this, he is told that the problem is his attitude.
Here begins the moral fraud of this current age.
Instead of confronting the material condition of workers, much of the establishment prefers to preach character. It tells workers to be resilient. It tells them to be grateful. It tells them to stop complaining. It tells them to abandon the so-called “employee mentality” and learn the virtues of hustle, entrepreneurship, and self-employment. It says that the age of the worker has passed, that the new age belongs to the self-starter, the disruptor, the independent earner, the small entrepreneur, the digital hustler, the person who does not ask for security but creates his own opportunity.
At first hearing, this language seems attractive. Who would oppose initiative? Who would condemn enterprise? Who would mock the man or woman who tries to earn independently? But the trouble begins when this language is used not to expand freedom, but to excuse injustice. It becomes a way of blaming workers for wanting decent wages. It becomes a way of saying that if one is poor, one has simply failed to become enterprising enough. It turns structural inequality into personal failure. It turns exploitation into a motivational seminar.
The worker who asks for a living wage is accused of dependency. The employee who seeks security is accused of lacking ambition. The unionist who speaks of collective bargaining is treated as a relic. The wage earner who complains of rising prices is told to start a sideline. The poor are told to become entrepreneurs, as if capital, land, credit, location, supply chains, licensing, technology, and market access were scattered freely on the streets for anyone with a positive attitude to collect.
This is not wisdom. It is evasion.
The truth is that today’s capitalism is not the capitalism of the mom-and-pop shop, though the establishment still pretends that it is. The defenders of the present order like to speak as though capitalism were simply the friendly neighborhood store, the family bakery, the small repair shop, the corner carinderia, the sari-sari store, the market vendor, the small stallholder waking before dawn to earn honestly. They point to these people as proof that the system is open, humane, and rooted in personal effort. They say: look, here is enterprise; here is freedom; here is the dignity of self-reliance.
But this is a romance, not an analysis.
In the Philippine case, the mom-and-pop shop certainly exists. The sari-sari store exists. The small vendor exists. The carinderia exists. The home-based baker, the talipapa seller, the repairman, the tricycle operator, the small contractor, the struggling online seller, the market stall owner, the family-run business—all of them exist. But they do not exist in a free and level field. They exist under pressure. They exist beneath rent, debt, permit costs, unstable supply prices, weak purchasing power, and the constant competition of larger players who have scale, credit, political access, advertising, logistics, technology, and the power to absorb losses until the small competitor gives up.
The establishment romanticizes small owners while refusing to look honestly at what they endure. It praises the vendor’s diskarte, but does not ask why survival has been reduced to diskarte. It celebrates the sari-sari store as the soul of Filipino enterprise, but does not ask why so many such stores function less as engines of prosperity than as thin defenses against poverty. It admires the carinderia owner’s perseverance, but ignores how food prices, rent, utilities, and low neighborhood incomes squeeze the business from all sides. It tells the poor to compete, but refuses to admit that competition between a small vendor and a corporate chain is often competition in name only.
What kind of competition exists when one side has wholesale advantage, tax lawyers, credit lines, mall access, delivery systems, political connections, and the ability to operate at a loss until rivals disappear? What kind of free market exists when the small owner must pay cash, borrow informally, buy at higher prices, and sell to customers whose own wages are too low? What kind of entrepreneurship is this, if the entrepreneur is merely a worker who has assumed all the risks without gaining real power?
This is why the romantic defense of capitalism through the image of the small shopkeeper is dishonest. Today’s capitalism is not primarily the neighborhood store. It is the conglomerate, the landlord, the importer, the platform, the franchise, the contractor, the bank, the mall, the agro-industrial estate, the logistics network, the political dynasty with business interests, the foreign investor seeking cheap labor, and the domestic oligarch able to turn policy into private advantage. The small owner is not the master of this order. He is often another victim of it.
Here, then, is the more difficult truth: the worker and the small entrepreneur are not natural enemies. They are made into enemies by a system that forces them to fight over the smallest portion of the economy.
The worker needs a living wage. This cannot be compromised. Every Filipino deserves a proper daily wage that allows a dignified life. A person who works full time should not remain poor by design. A society that depends on workers has an obligation to ensure that work provides more than hunger management. If a worker gives eight hours a day, or more, to production, service, transport, agriculture, care, education, security, or maintenance, that worker should be able to live decently.
But it is also true that many micro, small, and medium enterprises cannot simply be treated as if they were giant corporations. A small shop earning ₱20,000 to ₱50,000 a month is not in the same position as a national chain, a bank, a real estate giant, a mining firm, a logistics corporation, a power distributor, or a multinational exporter. If a small enterprise is required to pay a wage bill that consumes most of its income for even one employee, the problem cannot be dismissed by slogans. The owner still has to pay rent, electricity, water, supplies, transport, spoilage, permits, debt, and his own household expenses. Without public support, the result may be closure, informality, underemployment, or refusal to hire.
This is the trap. The worker cannot live on low wages. The small enterprise cannot always absorb higher wage costs without assistance. The large corporation can often pay more but resists doing so. The government praises labor but hesitates to restructure the economy. The rich lecture everyone about productivity. The poor are told to adjust.
A serious society would not pit the worker against the small entrepreneur. A serious society would understand that living wages and small enterprise support must go together. It would say: yes, wages must rise, because workers cannot live on praise. But it would also say: yes, small enterprises must receive help, because they cannot be expected to bear alone the social cost of correcting decades of wage injustice.
This is where government must act not as a ceremonial speaker but as an instrument of economic justice. It is not enough to issue Labor Day messages calling workers the backbone of the nation. A backbone cannot function if it is reduced to skin and bones. It is not enough to thank workers for their resilience. Resilience is not food. It is not rent. It is not medicine. It is not transport fare. It is not a school uniform. It is not a decent home. It is not social security.
The state must be willing to distinguish between different kinds of employers. It must not treat the struggling neighborhood enterprise and the large corporation as if they had the same capacity. It must provide wage subsidies, payroll assistance, tax relief, access to cheap credit, rent support, cooperative purchasing systems, public market improvements, social insurance support, and technical assistance for MSMEs. It must reduce the burden of compliance for genuinely small enterprises while enforcing labor standards against those who use “smallness” as a disguise for exploitation. It must protect workers without destroying the smallest employers. It must support small employers without sacrificing workers.
This requires policy, not poetry. It requires money, administration, enforcement, and political courage.
For large corporations, the matter is different. Their complaint against higher wages must be examined with suspicion. Many of them have the resources. What they lack is not capacity but willingness. They can fund expansions, advertising campaigns, executive compensation, consultancy fees, legal departments, and shareholder returns, yet they treat wage increases as a national emergency. They speak of competitiveness, but often what they mean is the preservation of cheap labor. They speak of efficiency, but the efficiency is purchased with the exhaustion of workers. They speak of market discipline, but they themselves rely on state favors, infrastructure, tax incentives, regulatory accommodations, and political access.
Worse, many large firms demand high qualifications for jobs they do not pay properly. The applicant must have a degree, experience, pleasing personality, digital skills, flexibility, emotional discipline, and willingness to work beyond the job description. The job advertisement asks for excellence; the salary offers survival. The corporation wants the polished worker but refuses to pay for the life that makes such polish possible. It wants competence without security, loyalty without reciprocity, professionalism without dignity.
This locks out many talented and skilled workers. Those without elite credentials are excluded. Those with ability but without the “proper” school or network are dismissed. Those who enter are overworked. Those who cannot enter are told to start businesses. Those who start businesses are crushed by larger players. Those who fail are blamed for lacking discipline. At every point, the system finds a moral explanation for what is actually an economic structure.
Here the old words return: oligarchs, landlords, bureaucrats, compradores, and foreign interests seeking cheap labor. Some may call these terms old-fashioned. They are not. They describe enduring arrangements of power. Land remains concentrated. Credit remains difficult. Regional wage boards fragment labor standards. Agrarian reform remains incomplete. Contractualization and informality remain tools of discipline. Public policy often bends toward those with influence. Foreign investment is welcomed not always because it brings development, but because it can be promised a labor force kept cheap, flexible, and grateful.
This is why the wage question cannot be separated from the land question, the enterprise question, the industrial question, and the state question. A living wage is not merely a number issued by decree. It belongs to a broader political economy. If land remains concentrated, rural labor remains weak. If unions remain suppressed or weakened, wage bargaining remains unequal. If MSMEs lack support, wage increases become difficult for the smallest employers. If big corporations dominate markets, small producers remain dependent. If imports, logistics, and retail channels are controlled by a few, prices remain vulnerable to manipulation. If the state refuses to confront concentrated power, every wage discussion becomes a managed quarrel among the powerless.
In this setting, the moral language of the establishment becomes especially offensive. Workers are told to be grateful because they have jobs. Small entrepreneurs are told to be proud because they are independent. The poor are told to be resilient because hardship builds character. The public is told to admire billionaires, tycoons, and “self-made” success stories. And when workers say that wages are too low, or small owners say that costs are too high, they are told that the market has spoken.
But markets do not speak with a neutral voice. Markets speak through power. They speak through ownership, access, law, enforcement, inherited advantage, political connection, and bargaining strength. To pretend otherwise is childish. Those who preach “Austrian school economics” or “orderism” as though these were magic formulas often sound less like analysts and more like role players reciting doctrines to spite workers. They speak as if the economy were made of pure exchange between equal individuals. They forget that one person enters the market with land, capital, lawyers, and influence, while another enters with only his body and the need to eat.
Freedom under such conditions is a thin word. The worker is “free” to accept a low wage or go hungry. The small entrepreneur is “free” to compete against a chain that can underprice him. The farmer is “free” to sell under terms shaped by traders and creditors. The applicant is “free” to refuse a bad job if he can afford unemployment. The vendor is “free” to pay rent or lose his spot. This is not freedom in any meaningful democratic sense. It is compulsion disguised as choice.
This is why many workers instinctively understand what more privileged commentators mock. They understand, without needing to quote theory, that labor creates value and that value is often captured elsewhere. They understand that the person who produces does not necessarily possess. They understand that the one who works longest does not necessarily live best. They understand that praise is often loudest where compensation is weakest. They understand why Marx, whatever one thinks of every doctrine attached to his name, still speaks to the worker’s condition: because he described the separation between labor and the wealth labor creates.
The Filipino worker does not need a foreign book to know exploitation. He knows it when the pay is gone before the week ends. She knows it when the child’s school project requires money that is not there. He knows it when overtime becomes expectation rather than exception. She knows it when management calls everyone “family” but treats requests for wage increases as betrayal. They know it when Labor Day arrives, and the speeches are grand, but the refrigerator remains nearly empty.
This is why the language of resilience must be challenged. Resilience is not inherently bad. Filipino workers have indeed shown strength, patience, adaptability, and courage. But when resilience becomes an excuse for low wages, it becomes obscene. When resilience is invoked by those who refuse reform, it becomes a tool of pacification. When the poor are told to be resilient while the powerful are shielded from sacrifice, resilience becomes another name for submission.
The same must be said of performative gratitude. There is nothing wrong with thanking workers. There is something deeply wrong with thanking them in order to avoid paying them properly. There is nothing wrong with honoring labor. There is something wrong with honoring labor only in words while denying its material demands. There is nothing wrong with calling workers heroes. There is something wrong with treating heroism as a substitute for justice.
The worker who asks for higher wages is not asking for charity. He is asking for a fair share of the value his labor helps create. The worker who asks for lower prices is not asking for luxury. She is asking that life not become impossible. The worker who asks for adequate subsidies is not asking to be pampered. He is asking that the state recognize the realities of inflation, low income, and unstable employment. The worker who asks for decent jobs is not opposing enterprise. She is asking that enterprise serve society rather than consume it.
At the same time, the small entrepreneur who asks for government support is not necessarily asking for privilege. Many are asking for the conditions that would allow them to pay better wages without collapsing. A real pro-worker policy must be pro-small producer as well. A real pro-enterprise policy must distinguish between the small owner struggling to survive and the bigwig hiding behind the language of entrepreneurship. To support MSMEs is not to oppose labor. Properly done, it is to make decent labor standards possible across the economy.
This is the point that must be insisted upon: the worker and the small owner must not be made to fight each other while the larger structure remains untouched. The sari-sari store owner is not the architect of national poverty. The small bakery is not the reason wages have stagnated. The neighborhood carinderia is not the cause of land monopoly. The small shopkeeper did not design regional wage fragmentation. The struggling employer did not build the political economy of cheap labor. Likewise, the worker demanding a living wage is not the enemy of small business. The worker is also the customer, the neighbor, the relative, the parent, the tenant, the commuter, the person whose purchasing power keeps local enterprise alive.
Low wages do not merely hurt workers. They hurt small businesses too. If workers have little money, they cannot buy from neighborhood stores. If families are always in survival mode, they reduce spending, borrow more, delay payments, and buy only the cheapest goods. The small vendor then suffers weak demand. The carinderia sells less. The repair shop waits longer. The local economy becomes thin. In that sense, living wages are not simply a cost; they are also a foundation of domestic demand.
But living wages cannot be imposed in a vacuum. They must be accompanied by public investment, social protection, price stabilization, affordable housing, public transport, health care, education, agrarian reform, and industrial policy. Otherwise the wage increase is forced to carry the burden of all other absent reforms. A family does not live by wages alone; it also lives by the cost and quality of public goods. If rent is unbearable, transport is chaotic, health care is expensive, and education is costly, even higher wages are quickly consumed. A serious labor policy must therefore be a social policy.
This was once better understood, at least rhetorically, in older developmental debates. The state was not supposed to be merely a night watchman guarding contracts. It was supposed to shape development, discipline capital, protect labor, support producers, and build national capacity. But in recent decades, the public has often been told that the state must step back, that the market knows best, that labor must be flexible, that wages must be competitive, that enterprise must be deregulated, and that social protection must be limited by fiscal caution. The result is a society where the poor are constantly instructed to adapt to a system that refuses to adapt to human need.
This is why the removal or reform of regional wage boards becomes more than a technical question. Regional wage setting is often defended as realistic because costs differ by area. But it can also become a mechanism for keeping labor divided and cheap. It tells workers that dignity depends on geography. It allows one region to become a reservoir of cheaper labor against another. It weakens the idea of a national standard of decent life. It suggests that a worker in one province needs less dignity than a worker in another, as though hunger itself respects administrative boundaries.
The same applies to agrarian reform. Without land reform, rural workers remain vulnerable to landlords, traders, millers, creditors, and seasonal employment. The sugar central, the plantation, the hacienda, the tenant farm, and the landless household are not merely remnants of the past. They are living structures that continue to shape wages and bargaining power. A worker without land, savings, or alternatives has little power to refuse bad conditions. A peasant without secure land must accept terms dictated by those who control access to production. Labor policy without agrarian reform is therefore incomplete.
Industrial policy also matters. A country cannot build decent wages on an economy that merely exports people, imports finished goods, services foreign demand, and competes by keeping labor cheap. If the national development model depends on low wages, then every Labor Day speech is already compromised. The state cannot praise workers while organizing the economy around their cheapness. It cannot call them heroes while marketing them as inexpensive. It cannot claim to honor dignity while treating low labor cost as an advantage.
This is the contradiction at the heart of the present order. The worker is called the backbone of the nation, but policy often treats him as a cost to be minimized. The overseas worker is called a modern hero, but the need to leave home is normalized. The delivery rider is called industrious, but platform insecurity is tolerated. The factory worker is called essential, but union power is feared. The farm worker is called the source of food, but rural poverty persists. The small entrepreneur is called the engine of growth, but is left to face corporate competition alone.
Words rise. Conditions remain- -and an old-style honesty is needed here: the issue is class power. One may soften the phrase, decorate it, update it, or bury it beneath management jargon, but the reality remains. There are those who live from wages, those who struggle through petty enterprise, and those who live from ownership, rent, interest, contracts, and control. The first two are lectured most often. The last are protected most carefully. The worker is told to be productive. The small owner is told to be innovative. The powerful are told they are indispensable to growth.
But a society must ask: growth for whom? Productivity for whom? Flexibility for whom? Competitiveness for whom? If the economy grows but workers cannot live decently, what has grown? If businesses expand but wages remain low, what has improved? If investors are pleased but families are hungry, what has been achieved? If malls rise while vendors disappear, if platforms expand while riders remain insecure, if factories export while workers borrow for food, then the language of progress has become a mask.
This is why Labor Day must not be reduced to ceremony. It must be a day of accounting. It must ask what the nation has done with the labor of its people. It must ask why those who build the economy often remain unable to enjoy its fruits. It must ask why small owners are romanticized but unsupported. It must ask why the poor are told to become entrepreneurs in an economy where genuine enterprise is strangled by concentrated power. It must ask why the state fears offending the powerful more than it fears the suffering of workers.
And it must ask, above all, what kind of society we intend to become.
A just society would say that no full-time worker should live in permanent insecurity. A just society would say that wages must be enough not only to survive but to participate in life. A just society would say that small enterprises should receive support precisely so they can meet labor standards. A just society would say that big corporations must carry a larger burden because they have benefited from scale, infrastructure, labor, and public order. A just society would say that land reform, industrial development, public services, and labor rights are not separate issues but parts of one democratic economy.
A badly ordered society does the opposite. It praises workers but keeps wages low. It romanticizes vendors but lets bigwigs crush them. It tells small entrepreneurs to compete but gives them little support. It tells workers to be grateful but ignores their hunger. It tells the poor to be disciplined while allowing the powerful to remain comfortable. It turns economics into morality for the weak and privilege for the strong.
That is the present danger.
The point is not to destroy enterprise. The point is to rescue enterprise from oligarchy and rescue labor from cheapness. The point is not to punish small owners. The point is to prevent them from being used as human shields against wage justice. The point is not to deny the value of initiative. The point is to stop pretending that initiative alone can overcome a structure built on inequality. The point is not to romanticize labor either. The point is to recognize that labor is the foundation of every serious economy, and that a foundation constantly starved will eventually crack.
So how much is the wage?
The answer cannot be found only in a boardroom table or a government formula. The answer must begin with life itself. Can the worker eat properly? Can the worker live near enough to work, or commute without losing hours and health? Can the worker send children to school? Can the worker afford medicine? Can the worker rest? Can the worker save? Can the worker face an emergency without falling into debt? Can the worker grow old without terror? If the answer is no, then the wage is not enough, whatever the law says.
And what of the small enterprise?
Can it pay that wage without collapsing? If not, then the state must help. Not by lowering the worker’s dignity, but by raising the capacity of the small producer. The answer is not to keep wages low forever. The answer is to reorganize support so that decent wages become possible. Wage subsidies, tax relief, affordable credit, public markets, cooperative supply systems, rent regulation where appropriate, social insurance support, and protection from predatory corporate competition are not luxuries. They are tools of national economic survival.
And what of the big corporation?
It must pay. It must stop hiding behind the suffering of small enterprises. It must stop using the language of competitiveness to justify cheap labor. It must stop demanding world-class workers at survival wages. It must stop pretending that profit is natural but wages are dangerous. If a corporation cannot exist without underpaying labor, then its business model is not efficient. It is parasitic.
The country must therefore reject the false choice between labor and enterprise. The true conflict is not between the worker and the small owner. The true conflict is between a democratic economy that values human life and an oligarchic economy that treats people as costs, markets as weapons, and poverty as discipline.
That is why the old slogans are no longer enough. “Sipag at tiyaga” cannot substitute for wages. “Diskarte” cannot substitute for policy. “Resilience” cannot substitute for justice. “Be grateful” cannot substitute for food. “Entrepreneurship” cannot substitute for land, credit, and fair competition. “Order” cannot substitute for dignity. And no economic school, however elegantly named, can erase the lived knowledge of workers who understand in their bones that something is wrong.
The Filipino worker deserves a wage that permits a dignified life.
The Filipino small entrepreneur deserves support against the pressures that only the big can easily survive.
The Filipino economy deserves to be freed from the grip of those who profit from cheap labor, weak bargaining power, land concentration, and policy capture.
Until then, Labor Day will remain haunted by contradiction. The worker will be praised in the morning and underpaid by evening. The vendor will be romanticized in speeches and crushed by competition in practice. The small owner will be called the backbone of enterprise but abandoned to rent, debt, and rising costs. The poor will be told to work harder, while those who benefit most from the existing order will call themselves builders of the nation.
But a nation is not built by those who merely own. It is built by those who work, produce, carry, plant, cook, teach, clean, repair, drive, assemble, serve, and sell. It is built also by the small people who risk their little savings to open a shop or stall, not because they dream of empire, but because survival has demanded another form.
If the state cannot protect them, then the state has failed its most basic duty.
If the economy cannot dignify them, then the economy is badly designed.
And if the powerful can still look at these conditions and answer only with moral lectures, then they have understood nothing of labor, nothing of enterprise, and nothing of justice.