Published — August 17, 2017
The following post does not create a lawyer-client relationship between Alburo Alburo and Associates Law Offices (or any of its lawyers) and the reader. It is still best for you to engage the services of your own lawyer to address your legal concerns, if any.
Also, the matters contained in the following were written in accordance with the law, rules, and jurisprudence prevailing at the time of writing and posting, and do not include any future developments on the subject matter under discussion.
Related Topic: Employer’s Guide to Minimum Terms and Conditions of Employment
According to former President Ramon Magsaysay, social justice means “[t]hose who have less in life should have more in law”. This is the very foundation of social legislation, which includes statutes intended to enhance the welfare of the people, particularly those which require payment of benefits by government agencies to the worker or his family when and while he cannot work by reason of sickness, disability, old age, death and similar hazards [See: Alcantara, 2008]. With this, the State established the Social Security System (“SSS”), the Home Development Mutual Fund (“Pag-IBIG”), and the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (“PhilHealth”).
SSS, Pag-IBIG and PhilHealth
The Philippine Social Security System is a social insurance program for workers, which operates under two programs. They are: (1) the Social Security Program, where all enrolled employees may enjoy maternity, sickness, disability, retirement and death/funeral benefits; and (2) the Employees’ Compensation Program, which assist workers who suffer work-connected sickness or injury resulting in disability or death [R.A. No. 8282; See also: www.sss.gov.ph].
Through Pag-IBIG, the Home Development Mutual Fund was established to provide a national savings program and affordable shelter financing for Filipino workers, where provident claims, as well as short term loans and housing programs, may be availed of by its members [P.D. No. 1752; See also: www.pagibigfund.gov.ph].
PhilHealth, on the other hand, implements the National Health Insurance Program, which was established to provide all citizens with the mechanism to gain financial access to health services, in combination with other government health programs. This social insurance program serves as the means for the healthy to help pay for the care of the sick, and for those who can afford medical care to subsidize those who cannot [R.A. No. 7875; See also: www.philhealth.gov.ph].
In these programs, the employer and the employee jointly pay for the latter’s contributions, where the amount of the employee’s share, in accordance with the established table of contributions, will be deducted from his salary, to be remitted by the employer to the concerned agencies. The rest of the contributions shall be shouldered by the employer.
Imprisonment and penal fines
Unfortunately, despite deducting from their employees’ salary the amount of SSS, Pag-IBIG and PhilHealth contributions, some employers do not remit said amounts to the government. In order to ensure faithful compliance with the programs’ noble purposes, complaints may be filed before the SSS, Pag-IBIG and PhilHealth offices, as the case may be. Employers always have to bear in mind that aside from being ordered to pay for the unremitted contributions, criminal penalties may likewise be imposed upon finding of guilt for such violations.
For SSS, a criminal fine in the amount of Php 5,000.00 to Php 20,000.00, or imprisonment of 6 years and 1 day to 12 years, or both, at the discretion of the court, may be imposed where the violation consists in failure or refusal to register employees, or to deduct contributions from the employees’ compensation and remit the same to the SSS [R.A. 8282, Sec. 28(e)].
For Pag-IBIG, the employer who fails to remit contributions without lawful cause or with fraudulent intent may be penalized with imprisonment of up to 6 years, and/or a fine of not less than but not more than twice the amount of contributions involved [R.A. 9679, Sec. 25].
Lastly, for PhilHealth, a penalty of fine in the amount of Php 500.00 to Php 1,000.00, multiplied by the total number of employees employed by them, and imprisonment of 6 months to 1 year may be imposed upon employers who fail or refuse to deduct contributions from the employee’s compensation, or to remit the same to PhilHealth [R.A. 7875, Sec. 44].
Prescriptive period for filing of criminal complaint
Following the prescriptive periods provided under Act No. 3326, from the time of the commission of the violation, or from discovery thereof, criminal complaints shall be filed within 8 years for violations of the SSS and Pag-IBIG laws, and within 4 years for violations of the PhilHealth law.
The foregoing, however, is concerned only with the extinguishment of the criminal liability for the offense. The general rule is, of course, that extinction of the penal action does not carry with it the extinction of the civil action to enforce civil liability arising from the offense charged, unless the extinction proceeds from a declaration in a final judgment that the fact from which the civil liability might arise did not exist. Thus, our Supreme Court still allowed a complaint to enforce civil liability to continue even after 10 years had passed already since the commission of the social security violation [See: G.R. No. 74689].
Our government’s campaign in ensuring compliance with said social welfare benefits already led to the conviction and imprisonment of countless employers who were found guilty of violating their legal obligations to their employees. Therefore, religiously deducting from employee’s salaries and remitting their contributions to the concerned agencies is clearly not only the right thing to do, but also a sure way to avoid complications that could give them more headaches in the process. We must always remember that the several pesos intended for social welfare benefits, when unjustly saved, is not worth one’s liberty.
Alburo Alburo and Associates Law Offices specializes in business law and labor law consulting. For inquiries regarding social security and other employee welfare benefits, you may reach us at info@alburolaw.com, or dial us at (02)7745-4391/0917-5772207.
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good day po ask lang po sana pano po kung bago na po yung management pano po maiiwasan bayaran yung mga penalty po nung nakaraan(sss,philhealth,pagibig) mga nag resign na po kasi yung mga umaayos . please help us . salamat po
good day. my husband is working on a law office. sya yung paralegal/secretary/msgr. ngstart lng sya ng voluntary contribution last year. sya lng mag isa ung empleyado, ung tatlo is abogado lahat. ok lng ba na voluntary ung contri nya considering na private employee sya. thanks.
Dear dora,
Yung husband mo, dapat declared sya ng firm kung saan sya nagwo-work bilang employee. As such, meron dapat share ang employer sa pagbabayad ng contributions nya, plus EC contributions na yung employer din nya ang dapat sumasagot. Since he is paying his contributions as a voluntary member, most likely walang naka-declare na employee yung firm, which should not be the case.
Ang consolation lang ng husband mo, since nagbabayad sya ng contributions kahit as voluntary member, may hulog lahat ng months nya at walang bungi sa contributions nya since last year when he started, which may come in handy if ever he decides to avail of certain benefits or take up loans.
-Atty. Arjay
Dear Atty.,
Are employed Senior Citizens considered regular employee even without being deducted SSS, Philhealth and Pagibig?
Thanks
Dear Lydia,
Seniors who have not yet retired and are actually working are still considered employees, and as such, they are still covered by SSS, Pag-IBIG and PhilHealth. They should still pay for their contributions, and their employers are still supposed to deduct it from their salaries.
-Atty. Arjay
Hi Attorney. Matagal na po akong nagwork sa company ko. Since 2012 pa. Nag start lang sila mag collect and mag remit ng pag ibig, philhealth and sss, 2017 lang. Pwede po ba akong mag file ng complaint sa kanila? Salamat po
Dear Mark,
Yes, you may file a complaint. SSS, Pag-IBIG and PhilHealth coverage starts the moment you get employed in 2012, so when they started deducting your contributions and remitting them only in 2017, there was a five year delinquency in payment of contributions.
-Atty. Arjay
Hi, i have 3 months unposted sss loan payment,sino po ba ang dapat ko balingan?si company po ba or si sss?..been requesting this kasi sa company namin para maayos nila pero sobrang tagal na po unposted pa rin po sya at naapektuhan po ang pag reloan ko,kasi kapag magreloan ako sss will be deducting those unposted payment sa new loan ko which is ayaw ko po mangyare.
Thanks
Dear Jonalyn,
I-check mo muna kung hindi nakapag-submit ng R-3 yung employer mo. Kung wala, sila ang habulin mo. Kung meron, si SSS na ang habulin mo.
-Atty. Arjay
hi po,
ask ko sana possible po ba ma ammend ang loan payment sa hdmf? kung halimbawa po yung employee na naghahawak ng remittances hindi niremit sa tamang tao ang loan payment kundi sa sarili nya, wala po kami evidence na magsasabi na sya mismo nagpapost nun kasi statement of account lang po meron kami na posted sa kanya, sinu po ba ang hahabulin ng Company dito? Pwede po ba ipaayos sa HDMF yung Loan Payment na yun?
Salamat po
Dear HROIC,
Ipaayos nyo yan, dahil kung hindi naman sya authorized magreceive ng loan proceeds, hindi din dapat ia-allow ng Pag-IBIG yan. Imbestigahan mo din, kasi baka may mga sinubmit na falsified Special Power of Attorney or other documents sa Pag-IBIG kaya pinapayagan yung employee na magremit ng loan payment sa sarili nya.
-Atty. Arjay
Good Day! I’m Aura. I’m about to file a housing loan thru Pagibig but then I found out that my 2 previous employer did not remit our contributions for HDMF. Need some advice please on what’s the best thing to do with my previous employer. I was with them for almost 2 years and the other company, I was with them for about 6months. Thank you in advance.
Dear Aura Castro,
Just report them to HDMF (and also check whether your SSS and PhilHealth are also unremitted, just in case). Let Pag-IBIG act on your complaint against your two former employers.
-Atty. Arjay
rather he can file a complain about this. I just want to help him ..
good day .. im from muntinlupa city .. this concern is from my elder brother who work in a company. The company that where he is working have no benefits like SSS, PAG-IBIG and PHILHEALTH, it is possible that i can file them a complain about this?
Dear aloja,
Yes, your brother can file a complaint. He may go to the respective SSS, Pag-IBIG and PhilHealth offices of the place where the company operates.
-Atty. Arjay
good day…. im from bacolod city… my employer now is not paying our sss, pag ibig, phill health for more than 1 year…. can you pleas help us…. even my co employee have this problem also in my present employer… pls help us thank you
Dear joenel galas,
Report your employer with SSS, Pag-IBIG and PhilHealth (make it in writing, and specify the details of the non-payment, applicable periods, how you discovered it, etc.). This will start the ball rolling.
-Atty. Arjay