Guatemala City –  The  organization representing Guatemala's textile and clothing  manufacturers said firms plan to lay off 6,000 workers this month in  response to the hike in the minimum wage decreed by President Alvaro Colom.
Companies "will reduce their payrolls by 10  percent in the month of January to be able to cover their costs," Vestex  chief Carlos Arias told a press conference.
He said the layoffs are a consequence of Colom's decision to  increase the daily minimum wage by 96 cents.
Textiles and clothing constitute "the country's most important  export sector, which supports some 70,000 families and contributes 6  percent of gross domestic product," Arias said.
To avert layoffs, Vestex asked the president to "gauge the  negative consequences" of his decision and "substantially reduce" the  wage increase.
As Guatemalan clothing and  textile manufacturers are unable to raise prices in the current  international environment, "no other alternative is left to our sector  than to eliminate jobs to survive in this market," Arias said.
Colom imposed the increase after the National  Salary Commission, comprising representatives of the employers, workers  and the Labor Ministry, failed to reach agreement on the 2011 minimum  wage.
The president said the hike he  ordered will allow the earnings of low-paid workers to almost keep pace  with inflation, which was 5.39 percent last year.
More than half of Guatemala's 14.4 million  people live below the official poverty line and upwards of 2,000  Guatemalan children died last year of causes related to malnutrition.