The Borneo Post

As wild weather worsens, Philippine­s migration takes on a female face

- By Rina Chandran

PAMANTINGA­N, Philippine­s: When the rains failed in 2015 and drought gripped southern Mindanao in the Philippine­s, Corazon Vegafria knew what she had to do: move to the city of Koronadal, about an hour away by bus, and find work as a domestic helper to support her family.

Her husband looked after the children while Vegafria sent home most of the 2,000 pesos (US$38) she earned every month cooking and cleaning at her employer’s home.

“We had no choice - we needed the money, and I could easily find a job in the city,” she said. Six months later, she returned home “when the situation improved”.

In the past two decades, the Philippine­s has emerged as one of the world’s leading source countries for migrant workers, particular­ly as more powerful typhoons and other harsh weather make life at home harder.

More than 10 million Filipinos currently work abroad, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority. But in the last few years, the gender balance has shifted, with about 55 per cent of overseas workers now women, its data shows.

That makes the Philippine­s an outlier in a world where most migrant workers are men.

Globally, migration is growing, especially among families hit by disasters, conflict or weather shifts - and that growth does not always adhere to traditiona­l patterns.

In some places, seasonal migration is slowly leading to permanent relocation. In others, migrants are heading to new destinatio­ns. In the Philippine­s, one of the biggest changes is that migration is gradually taking on a female face.

Each day, hundreds of rural women pack their bags for jobs as maids and care-givers, largely in the Middle East and the United States. Others go to Singapore and Hong Kong.

Thousands of women also flock to Philippine cities including Manila, Davao and Koronadal, where they work as domestic helpers or in malls and restaurant­s, sending money home to pay for their children’s schooling or to invest in farms their husbands tend.

“Migration is linked to low agricultur­al productivi­ty, natural disasters such as droughts and typhoons, failed deals to secure land rights, and conflicts,” said Alvin Chandra, a research fellow at the University of Queensland in Australia. “Increasing­ly, it is a coping strategy for young women to diversify family income and overcome poverty,” said Chandra, who has studied migration in Mindanao, where an armed conflict has raged for decades. Higher Salaries Across Southeast Asia, people are migrating in rising numbers, with the wealthier countries of Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand the top destinatio­ns, according to the World Bank.

Singapore’s average monthly wage is more than 30 times that of Cambodia, while Malaysia’s is triple that of Indonesia and the Philippine­s, it said.

Migration plays an outsize role in the Philippine­s’ economy, where remittance­s from overseas workers make up about a 10th of gross domestic product - the highest share in the region.

Women are leaving home in greater numbers, as they can get long-term jobs more easily. Men, by comparison, usually land short-term, seasonal work.

Some migrants, like Vegafria, move for a few months at a time to get their families through a lean period. But many end up staying on, as a cycle of frequent storms and drought makes it harder to live off the land.

Elisabeth Pacaldo, for instance, moved to Manila in 2002 to work as a nanny after income from fishing and farming fell in the Visayas region where she came from. Her husband stayed behind to care for their five children.

After four years, Pacaldo, now 55, was able to send for three of her kids. Her husband moved to Manila in 2008 to work as a driver.

“It’s easier for women to find work in the city, and the salaries are higher. I can’t go back,” said Pacaldo, who now works as an administra­tive assistant in a nonprofit. ‘Extreme Choices’ Worsening extreme weather is an important driver of migration in rural parts of the Philippine­s, a country seen by experts as highly vulnerable to climate change.

“There are some climate impacts where adaptation and risk reduction efforts are no longer a feasible option. People have to make extreme choices, and migration is one of them,” Chandra said.

The Philippine­s and other developing nations must acknowledg­e migration as one way of coping, and develop “a comprehens­ive strategy that ensures the safety and dignity of their most vulnerable people”, he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

 ??  ?? Female overseas Filipino workers are welcomed by Overseas Workers Welfare Administra­tion chief Hans Cacdac and other officials in February 2018.
Female overseas Filipino workers are welcomed by Overseas Workers Welfare Administra­tion chief Hans Cacdac and other officials in February 2018.
 ??  ?? The women in Pamantinga­n village are among the millions of Filipino women who moved to cities and other countries to find jobs, leaving their families behind. — Thomson Reuters Foundation photos
The women in Pamantinga­n village are among the millions of Filipino women who moved to cities and other countries to find jobs, leaving their families behind. — Thomson Reuters Foundation photos

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia