The Philippine Star

Time for trabaho at negosyo

- JOEY CONCEPCION

We can only grow if everybody grows with us. Our economy can grow if our MSMEs grow because they comprise 99 percent of enterprise­s in the country. As jobs increase, wages will follow. As wages increase, consumer spending will increase, and our GDP will rise. This is the circle of prosperity that can make the Philippine­s a more inclusive nation.

The more I consider the country’s situation and discuss with others how best to help us move forward as a nation, the more I am convinced that we can only move forward together, with no one left behind.

I have been traveling last week as part of my duties with the ASEAN Business Advisory Council (BAC), and I am happy to share that nine of the ASEAN member-states in the ASEAN BAC are now part of the regional implementa­tion of an agricultur­e-MSME developmen­t plan patterned after our very own Kapatid Angat Lahat sa Agri Program. When all is set, we will have harnessed the potential of the largest agricultur­e companies in the region to uplift the ASEAN’s agricultur­e industry by sharing markets and technologi­es and optimizing the trade of key commoditie­s within our region.

I’m back in Manila now and while I have been keeping track of the news back home, it’s really different once you get a feel of the general mood: what people are talking about in the streets, what dominates the local news and commentary, what gets the most attention on social media.

What I can say is: we have to keep our eye on the ball. Having recently arrived from abroad and after a lot of intense discussion­s with economic leaders and leading businessme­n in the ASEAN, the Philippine­s is now in very competitiv­e company: our neighbors are intent on making the most out of the optimism placed in the growth of the region, as well as the infrastruc­ture bonanza that is the rail systems and roads being built in the mainland. Once completed, these will cut by at least half the travel time between major cities in at least four countries and open up many towns and cities to economic activity. The Philippine­s is miles away from that physical connection and thus we have to work harder and stay focused if we’re to keep up. We can’t afford to be distracted or to lose hope.

The slower growth in our GDP at yearend, for example, should not dampen our spirits. It’s down because consumer spending is down; even the economists are attributin­g the economic slowdown to high inflation and interest rate increases, which affected and directly translated to household spending. Just ask the nanays who go to the market daily and you’ll see.

But this is to be expected. From the euphoria of being out of the pandemic and returning to normal, there was a spike in revenge spending and now is the time people are reining it in. Some good came out of it, though. We saw many small businesses being born during the pandemic. They went through the trial of fire, so to speak, so they are used to the ups and downs of business and know how to adapt.

Another upside (and one that I would like to believe is an offshoot of more small businesses being founded) is that unemployme­nt is at its lowest level, with many finding work in the informal sector to augment the family income.

Yes, this may not be the ideal situation we would like for our workers, but it just emphasizes the urgency of strengthen­ing our workforce by reskilling and upskilling and, alongside that, scaling up our MSMEs so they can generate more jobs, especially in the smaller communitie­s.

Reskilling and upskilling are important to both the workforce and MSMEs. Both, for example, need to learn how to be influencer­s: how to promote their skills or businesses, differenti­ate their products or services – basically the ABC’s of marketing.

MSMEs will be our greatest job generators if we scale them up. For now, it is the quick win in employing people while we upskill them for the jobs that the world needs. These two are the focus of Go Negosyo and the Jobs cluster of the Private Sector Advisory Council: negosyo at trabaho.

Upskilling can also benefit our present and future OFWs. We are fortunate that household consumptio­n is still being supported by the continuing remittance­s from OFWs; it is even cushioning the effects of a lower peso, thanks to the stronger purchasing power of each dollar our OFWs send home.

But there’s another bright spot: tourism. I saw for myself how small towns like Luang Prabang, in the mountainou­s part of Laos, can be made ready to receive an internatio­nal delegation. It now stands to become a dollar-earner for the country. I visited Bangkok again after many years and though it is a well-worn travel destinatio­n, it hasn’t lost its luster. It – along with Phuket and other parts of Thailand – managed to produce 35 Michelin-starred restaurant­s. I am sure the Philippine­s doesn’t lack talented chefs, and it has so much to offer to internatio­nal tourists in terms of beaches and heritage sites.

Through all this, the private sector will have a major part, and it is willing to help; not just out of pure altruism – we have to be honest about that – but because a chain is only as strong as its weakest link. We can only grow if everybody grows with us.

The Filipino is good at lifting himself up by his bootstraps. But I think it is time to channel this resilience into proactive endeavors that enable us to thrive, rather than merely endure. It is no longer enough to rely solely on our resilience and resourcefu­lness to survive day-today; we must shift our mindset towards envisionin­g a future filled with possibilit­ies and taking decisive action to turn those dreams into reality. To dream big, act with purpose and ignore the noise. H

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