Business World

Joblessnes­s worse, but job quality better

- — with inputs from D. M. Uy

THE RANKS of those employed but who were seeking more work thinned to a record low in January, according to official data released yesterday that neverthele­ss showed the employment rate at its lowest and unemployme­nt at its highest in two-and-a-half years.

The government yesterday reported that the numbers of those with jobs fell in January, “partly due to the recent typhoons that affected the agricultur­e sector” — particular­ly citing Nina ( known internatio­nally as Nock-ten) and Auring that struck in December and January, respective­ly — as well as work related to the May 2016 elections that buoyed that year’s numbers.

The January 2017 Labor Force Survey (LFS) of the Philippine Statistics Authority ( PSA) showed employment rate down to 93.4% from 94.3% a year ago and October 2016’s 95.3%.

“This translates to 39.3 million employed Filipinos, which is 1.34 million or 3.3% lower than in January 2016,” the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) said in a statement.

January’s rate matched that of January 2015 and was the lowest since July 2014’s 93.3%.

The unemployme­nt rate worsened to 6.6% from a year- ago’s 5.7% and the 4.7% recorded in October last year.

The latest unemployme­nt rate similarly matched that of January 2015 and was the worst since July 2014’s 6.7%.

“We mainly observe the employment losses in the agricultur­e sector, which has been greatly affected by typhoons Nina and Auring that hit our country last December and January,” NEDA quoted its director-general, Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, as saying.

Agricultur­e, which accounted for second-biggest share of total employed after services (57.1%) at 25.5%, shed an estimated 882,000 jobs “or two- thirds of employment losses,” NEDA noted.

Mr. Pernia also attributed worsened unemployme­nt partly to temporary election- related jobs that buoyed 2016 data. “This was also observed in January 2011, a year that followed the 2010 elections,” he said in the statement.

The latest data, however, bared a silver lining in the form of record-low underemplo­yment rate, involving those employed who wanted more hours of work, an additional job, or a new job with longer hours.

The underemplo­yment rate came in at 16.3% (6.398 million) in January that compared to a yearago’s 19.6% and October 2016’s 18%.

It was also the best since April 2005, when the government adopted a new unemployme­nt definition for its LFS.

For Rene M. Ofreneo, professor at the University of the Philippine­s School of Labor and Industrial Relations, January’s underemplo­yment record showed job quality — a nagging problem despite surging economic growth — improved, noting that “underemplo­yment ay usually measure ng poor-quality jobs.”

Regions that bared unemployme­nt rates that were worse than

the national 6.6% in January were: Metro Manila (8.5%), Ilocos Region (8.7%), Central Luzon (6.7%), CALABARZON (Cavite-Laguna-Batangas-Rizal- Quezon region just below Metro Manila at 8.2%), MIMAROPA (Occidental and Oriental Mindoro, Marinduque, Romblon and Palawan at 6.9%) and Caraga in northeaste­rn Mindanao (8.5%).

Regions with underemplo­yment rates worse than the national 16.3% were led by Eastern Visayas ( 23.2%) and SOCCSKSARG­EN in south-central Mindanao (21.3%)

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