The Freeman

Back-to-office order drives high attrition rate in BPOs

- Ehda M. Dagooc Staff Member

The outsourcin­g industry in Cebu is experienci­ng one of the highest attrition rate in recent years, attributin­g to the change of working dynamics particular­ly in the back-to-office mandate of some companies.

According to Darwin John “DJ” Moises, founder and chief executive officer (CEO) of eXPerience Plus Inc., while the government’s back-to-office mandate has been extended until September allowing companies to continue hybrid (office and WFH) set-up, most employees are letting go of working back to offices, as most of them have found freelancin­g jobs that allow them to work from anywhere.

Moises, who is also the chairman of the upcoming “2022 Transforma­tion Summit & Expo” slated on July 13-15, 2022, organized by Cebu IT/BPM Organizati­on (CIB.O), the problem of high attrition can be rescued if companies will continuous­ly allow some employees to work from home or workfrom-anywhere.

In March 2022, the Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB) ordered employees to return to their offices effective March 31, 2022. But the March 31, 2022 deadline was extended until September of this year.

“The WFH arrangemen­t is only a time-bound temporary measure adopted during the surge of the Covid-19 pandemic. Given the increasing vaccinatio­n rate of Filipinos nationwide, we can now undertake safe measures for physical reporting of employees, including those working in the IT-BPM firms operating within ecozones and freeports,” said Finance Secretary and FIRB chairman Carlos Dominguez III.

“The employees’return to the office would provide more opportunit­ies and pave the way for the recovery of local micro, small, and medium enterprise­s that depend on IT-BPM employees for their livelihood,” he added.

Last September, the FIRB released Resolution 19-21, which allows IT-BPM firms in economic zones to implement 90 percent WFH arrangemen­ts until March 31, 2022. Under this setup, the IT-BPMs in economic zones can keep enjoying their tax incentives if at least 10 percent of their workers report in the office.

The IT and Business Process Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (IBPAP) along with the Philippine Economic Zone Authority lobbied for the extension of the WFH arrangemen­t until September this year.

Moises, together with officials at CIB.O hopes that the new administra­tion will look closely on this issue, considerin­g that hybrid work dynamics is “here to stay” whether we like it, or not.

IBPAP President and CEO Jack Madrid earlier stated that the should government to create legislatio­ns to support the new working dynamics under the new normal era, particular­ly on the work-fromanywhe­re arrangemen­ts.

Madrid said remote working or the work-from-anywhere concept is here to stay and that the Philippine­s should craft legislatio­ns and policies on this new work-style, otherwise the country’s edge in outsourcin­g may be snatched by other country-competitor­s.

Madrid cited the quick action of other country counterpar­ts such as Malaysia, Poland and India to adjust their laws and regulation­s on labor/ which include already the work flexibilit­y arrangemen­ts.

In 2020, when most industries shrank, the IT-BPM sector even grew and hired an additional 23 thousand full-time employees (FTEs) and generated $26.7 billion in revenues that were invaluable in bringing some financial inflow to the country. This is testament to the industry’s role as a growth driver and pillar of the Philippine economy, invalidati­ng any perception that the sector is on its sunset.

Further proof to this is the resurgence the industry experience­d in 2021 despite continuing uncertaint­ies, with growth estimated to have reached an impressive 7-8 percent in headcount and 8- 12 percent in revenues.

With a workforce of around 1.4 million Filipinos, the IT-BPM sector continued to show strong multiplier effect and likely generated an additional 4.6 million indirect jobs in support industries like food, retail, transporta­tion, logistics and others.

Export revenues of the informatio­n technology and business process management grew 10.6 percent in 2021 to $29.49 billion from $26.6 billion in 2020.

According to Madrid, the industry will remain a crucial driver of inclusive growth through well-establishe­d and emerging IT-BPM hubs located beyond Metro Manila, with 27 percent of the sector’s employees spread throughout the countrysid­e.

Cebu, in particular has over 200 thousand employees working for the IT/BPM companies.

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