Business World

Philippine­s falls in Tholons’ Digital Nations list

- By Arlay L. Balinbin Senior Reporter

THE Philippine­s dropped out of the top 10 in a list of countries that are considered attractive destinatio­ns for technology, digital and innovation, and business process management, after seeing a decline in the workforce population amid the pandemic.

From fifth place in 2020, the Philippine­s now ranks 18th in the Top 50 Digital Nations, according to the latest Tholons Global Innovation Index.

At the same time, Metro Manila and Cebu City both saw their rankings slide in Tholons’ Top 100 Super Cities list. Metro Manila slipped to 8th spot from 2nd place last year, while Cebu City plummeted to 52nd place from 12th spot a year ago.

In the innovation index, the Philippine­s fell 13 spots, even as its scores rose to 0.65 (up 12%) in digital and innovation, and to 0.62 (up 29%) in super cities.

However, its score for workforce population slumped by 95% to 0.04. This was one of the lowest scores for the workforce population — an indicator of the talent pool available that can be skilled or reskilled to serve cross industries in services.

The Philippine­s also scored 2.34 in the diversity and inclusion area, a new indicator in this index that assesses nations in terms of women’s equality, pay gap, women in leadership roles, and funding made available to women entreprene­urs. This was among the highest scores for this area globally.

It should be noted, however, Tholons increased its emphasis on digital factors in this year’s index to 40% from 25% last year, when it attributed traditiona­l factors with 75% weightage.

The parameters considered for digital and innovation, an area where the Philippine­s saw some improvemen­t are: open innovation ecosystem; number of startups; startup diversity and maturity; innovative policies and incentives; investors; unicorns; cybersecur­ity; global digital competitiv­eness; digital literacy rate; digital evolution; digital talent and hightech patent grants; business agility; and usage of robotic process automation; and artificial intelligen­ce and cloud.

The United States bounced back to the top spot on the innovation index, from third place in 2020. India slipped to second place from last year’s top ranking, followed by Canada (third from fourth), Germany (fourth from 35th), and Singapore (fifth from ninth).

Other Southeast Asian nations also saw their rankings slide on the list, namely Vietnam (25th from 13th), Malaysia (33rd from 26th), Thailand (35th from 27th), and Indonesia (50th from 20th).

SUPER CITIES

Metro Manila saw its ranking slip as a “super city” after getting lower scores — 0.38 (down 66%) in the talent, skill and quality indicator; 0.26 (down 72%) in business catalyst; 0.41 (down 62%) in cost and infrastruc­ture; and 0.80 (down 23%) in risk and quality of life. Its score improved to 3.16 (up 84%) in terms of innovation and capital.

Meanwhile, Cebu’s score in the talent, skill and quality indicator was unchanged at 0.77. Its scores were mixed — 0.40 (down 47%) in business catalyst, 0.89 (up 7%) in cost and infrastruc­ture, 0.93 (up 6%) in risk and quality of life, and 0.85 (down 33%) in innovation and capital.

Toronto topped the list of super cities, followed by Singapore (second from ninth), Bangalore (third from first), San Francisco (fourth from 30th), and Dublin (still fifth) .

Other super cities in Southeast Asia included Kuala Lumpur (17th from 18th), Hanoi (50th from 31st), Bangkok (51st from 79th), Ho Chi Minh (58th from 39th), Penang (77th from 88th), and Jakarta (85th from 52nd).

“Organizati­ons will need more active engagement strategies, if they want to thrive and succeed,” Tholons, a global strategic consulting, digital innovation and investment advisory group, said in the report.

“Leading businesses are adopting ‘human-AI’ collaborat­ion. As social distancing becomes the norm, in many industries, robots are transition­ing faster than expected from regulated environmen­ts to unregulate­d environmen­ts. Corporatio­ns and government­s are looking for more and newer ‘contact-less’ solutions,” it added.

Sought for comment, Terry L. Ridon, convenor of InfraWatch PH, said via e-mail: “We have serious concerns on the methodolog­y of the Tholons index, in which we are seeing downward trends of 95% on workforce population, 66% in talent, skill and quality indicators, 72% in business catalyst, 62% in cost and infrastruc­ture, and 84% in innovation and capital.”

“Outside of the coronaviru­s crisis, there is nothing substantia­lly different from the previous year on Filipino talent, business environmen­t and innovation to warrant the substantia­l reduction of ratings in these areas,” he added.

Mr. Ridon noted, however, that the results should be viewed as a continuing challenge to further improve the quality of the country’s workforce, especially in artificial intelligen­ce (AI), machine learning, robotics, and biotechnol­ogy areas.

“Instead of a focus on graduates readily available for overseas deployment, such as those in the healthcare sector, higher education should also focus on training a new set of graduates who can globally compete within the country,”’ he said.

He expects Manila and Cebu to remain the main hubs for innovation and talent pool.

“But a clear nexus should be made between academe and industry to produce profession­als who can provide the needed knowhow for the current zeitgeist for AI, robotics, machine learning, among others,” Mr. Ridon explained. “The government, through the Commission on Higher Education, plays a major role in defining this nexus.”

For his part, Claro dG. Cordero, Jr., director and head of research at Cushman & Wakefield, said the Philippine­s is exhibiting the challenges of “mature/ traditiona­l markets, made more complicate­d by the ongoing pandemic.”

To address concerns over its workforce population, he said the Philippine­s should step up its efforts to further expand the talent pool by attracting labor that can adapt to more digital enhancemen­ts in the industry.

“Relevant stakeholde­rs must provide more skills enhancemen­ts, as well as ensure competitiv­eness of the industry to provide secure, safe and rewarding career pathing — factors that continuous­ly pose threats to talent availabili­ty,” Mr. Cordero noted.

On the decline of Manila and Cebu’s rankings, Mr. Cordero noted the imbalance between demand and supply in business process outsourcin­g and technology innovation needs to be addressed for the cities to regain their competitiv­eness.

“There needs to be a specific focus on sourcing skilled labor to address substantia­l reduction in training overheads and increasing complexity of the roles within the BPO sector,” Mr. Cordero explained.

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