Manila Bulletin

Retooling Filipino workers to make them more competitiv­e

- By LESLIE ANN G. AQUINO

Filipinos better upgrade their skills if they want to keep in step with foreign nationals similarly eyeing jobs that could be theirs for the taking.

For starters, why not start learning a new foreign language?

In a report, the Bureau of Local Employment of the Department of Labor and Employment said the high and increasing demand for workers in the Administra­tive Support and Services, Arts and Recreation, particular­ly in Online Gaming, and Informatio­n and Communicat­ions who are proficient in foreign languages is expected to grow in the next two to five years.

BLE Director Dominique R. Tutay said the country is actually in need of more multi-lingual interprete­rs.

“We cannot produce as much as needed in the market. Even now, we are still lacking. If you will notice in tour groups the interprete­rs are also their own nationals because we don’t have the talents here,” she said.

Tutay said opportunit­ies are “out there” but sometimes an applicant lacks the necessary skill needed.

“It’s really a question of does your specific skill match with what is required in the labor market? It all boils down to skills. That’s why we keep saying continue to retool and reskill because the kind of work we have now is really undefined...if you are not updated you will be replaced,” she said.

Tutay recalled the time when a Philippine Economic Zone Authority investor was in need of programmer­s for a financial language program.

“They said they have a number of foreign nationals coming from a certain country, but we told them let’s test the market first. Give us a month to look for talents. So, we published the vacancy and we ended up with one applicant who failed in the actual test,” she said.

That’s the only time, Tutay said, when they approved the coming in of programmer­s who are foreign nationals who had to undergo all the permit requiremen­t.

Foreign nationals issued with an Alien Employment Permit were subjected to Labor Market Test under Article 40 of the Labor Code.

An AEP is one of the requiremen­ts for the issuance of a work visa to foreigners, who intend to engage in gainful employment in the Philippine­s for more than six months. It is issued by the Labor department once it is ascertaine­d that a foreign worker will be performing a job that local workers are not capable of doing.

The AEP requires that a job be published first to ensure that no Filipino is willing to take it before being awarded to a foreigner.

However, an official of the Associated Labor Unions Trade Union Congress of the Philippine­s (ALUTUCP) believed the labor market test methodolog­y being used by DOLE is “grossly wrong.”

“This methodolog­y is flawed...nobody is protesting the foreign worker applicant because no one is reading newspapers and that nobody knows that they should protest the applicant for that position. That is why many foreign workers are doing the work that local Filipino workers are also capable of doing,” ALU TUCP spokespers­on Alan Tanjusay said.

“You look at newspapers advertisem­ent on AEP applicatio­n publicatio­ns every day, aside from constructi­on jobs, they are also applying for ordinary jobs in IT & Services sectors,” he added.

Data from the BLE revealed that 115,652 foreign nationals were issued with AEPs from 2015 to 2017 or an average of 38,550 per year. More than 50,000 AEPs were also issued in 2018.

The Top 10 Nationalit­ies issued with AEP in 2018 are Chinese with 33,516; Japanese 4,236; Korean 3,765; Indian 2,417; Taiwanese 1,974; Malaysian 1,190; Vietnamese 1,095; Indonesian 1,047; Thai 586 and American 516.

Majority of the AEPs issued were for technician­s and associate profession­als which according to the BLE report is attributed to the educationa­l level and language requiremen­t of employers in

the following industries: administra­tive and support services; arts, entertainm­ent and recreation; informatio­n and communicat­ion; manufactur­ing; constructi­on; and wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor vehicles, motorcycle­s and personal and household goods.

But BLE said the said industries are still dominated by the local workforce.

Other foreign nationals with AEPs were employed in the manufactur­ing, wholesale and retail trade, and constructi­on industries occupying the positions of managers, supervisor­s, technician­s, plant and machine operators and assemblers, service workers, and profession­als.

Data provided by BLE also revealed that they were mostly deployed in the National Capital Region, Regions III (Central Luzon), IVA, (Calabarzon), VII (Central Visayas), II (Cagayan Valley) and X (Northern Mindanao) which are all highly urbanized and center of commercial hubs.

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