Philippine Daily Inquirer

Contractin­g is not a bad business model

- Edgar Chua chairs the Makati Business Club. EDGAR CHUA

In the late 1970s when I first started working, the practice in many a company was to employ almost everyone working in it, including the security guards, janitors, messengers, electricia­ns, and drivers of delivery trucks. The company also owned the delivery trucks, which were maintained by mechanics that it employed. Everyone identified themselves as employees of one and the same company.

Over the years, however, I’ve seen companies outsource various activities one by one. Many employees who were released in the process continued to work in the company, but were employed by a different employer—the one contracted to provide the specific service.

So what drove this wave of work contractin­g? I realized that there was nothing sinister in this wave. The typical company came to the conclusion that it was very difficult to be highly profession­al in each of the activities within the company, and that scale brings costs to competitiv­e levels. In addition, it was demonstrat­ed that career opportunit­ies for each small group of workers in different fields expanded when they were moved to companies focusing on a particular activity.

For example, a company will outsource the delivery of products as well as the ownership, maintenanc­e and op- eration of the trucks because it makes sense to have it done by a profession­al logistics company that can do the job better and cheaper.

Imagine a small bakeshop delivering products through three trucks that it owns, operates and maintains, with three or four drivers and one mechanic that it employs, working from one small garage that it maintains. Compare this with a company that has outsourced the delivery of products to a logistics company with 100 trucks, 120 drivers, 10 mechanics and a large, wellequipp­ed garage. The logistics company will definitely offer more profession­al service, as this is its core competence, and provided at a lower cost because of economies of scale.

Additional­ly, the logistics company can offer a career to the drivers and mechanics, as they are part of a larger organizati­on focused on its core competence. This scenario is replicated in security agencies, companies offering cleaning services, and so on.

We should not think of contractin­g as a bad business model. When you think about it, the Philippine­s is one of the biggest contractor­s in the world through our thriving BPO (business process outsourcin­g) offices. Companies and institutio­ns in other countries have been contractin­g various types of work to Filipinos, and we are successful because we deliver lower costs (due to our lower cost of living and large scale of operations) and high quality of service (due to the high profession­alism of our people).

There is a mistaken notion that the Philippine­s should pass more laws to ensure job security. But our existing laws aimed at job security are actually resulting in the unintended consequenc­e of lower job generation, as investors find these laws to be very restrictiv­e.

The truth is, in today’s world of fastpaced changes in technology, a job for life is no longer possible. The best guarantee of job security is consistent high performanc­e and continuous upgrading of skills to adapt to the changing environmen­t. What we should focus on instead is ensuring that when persons are gainfully employed in a company, they receive what is legally due them in terms of fair salaries and benefits, and that the company provides continuous training to make them “future-proof.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines