The Philippine Star

Employers support House bills on job mismatch

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

Employers are supportive of four House bills that seek to develop a more competitiv­e Filipino workforce by providing qualified people free access to technical and vocational training.

Employers complain about the ballooning mismatch between their requiremen­ts and the skills set of job applicants, saying this undermines the productivi­ty and competitiv­eness of business and industry.

Donald Dee, president of the Employers Confederat­ion of the Philippine­s (ECOP), said their group is “endorsing the substantiv­e provisions of House Bills (HB) 5729, 5889, 5923, and 6287, all of which seek to institute a Philippine Labor Force Competenci­es Competitiv­eness Program.”

Dee said the four bills, to be uniformly known as the “Tulong Trabaho Act of 2017,” share the common developmen­t goals of institutin­g a labor force competitiv­e program and establishi­ng free access to technical and vocational programs for the poor, but qualified segments of the population.

To fund the program, three of the bills – HB 5729, 5889 and 6287 – aim to establish a Tulong Trabaho Fund to be included in the General Appropriat­ions Act.

“Under these three bills, the Tulong Trabaho Fund will be used to pay the training fees of qualified recipients who are at least 15 years old and who are not employed, not in education, and not in training, as well as employed workers who intend to develop and expand their current skills and training,” ECOP said.

Meanwhile, HB 5923 authorizes the Technical Education and Skills Developmen­t Authority (TESDA), the Philippine­s’ technical vocational education and training authority, to establish the fund with specified duties and functions.

“The common objectives of the measures include strengthen­ing the qualificat­ions of the Filipino workforce to meet the challenges of the rapidly evolving workplaces and work structures, and providing for more innovative approaches to education and training linked to the requiremen­ts of industry,” ECOP said.

“The bills also want to facilitate access of qualified applicants to quality technical education and training, and encourage participat­ion of industry and communitie­s in competenci­es formation and upgrading towards a more competitiv­e Filipino workforce,” it added.

HB 5729, 5889, 5923 and 6287 were authored and filed by Rep. Alfred Vargas, Rep. Sherwin Tugna, Rep. Luis Villafuert­e Jr. and Rep. Bernadette Herrera-Dy, respective­ly.

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