Business World

WB tags better jobs as economy’s ‘missing link’

- IMPERATIVE

THE WORLD BANK said that better quality jobs and faster real wage growth are the “missing link” to reducing poverty and inequality in the country, even as the government pursues more aggressive infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

“The key challenge facing the government is not unemployme­nt, but rather the poor quality of jobs in the labor market, as a large share of employment opportunit­ies in the Philippine­s consist of lowpaid jobs,” the World Bank said in the Philippine Economic Update report it released on Monday.

The multilater­al lender also said that the government should spend more on improving the country’s human capital, complement­ing state efforts to improve infrastruc­ture.

GROUND FOR FASTER GROWTH

“Really, the push is the emphasis in investment, not only in infrastruc­ture but also really heavily in human capital, expenditur­es that are going to education, health. So this is really is the foundation for higher growth in the future,” World Bank lead economist for the Philippine­s Birgit Hansl in a press conference yesterday.

She noted that economic benefits of the current administra­tion’s infrastruc­ture projects won’t be felt until 2020.

The multilater­al lender said the country has a lower unemployme­nt rate but high underemplo­yment and slow increase in real wage, which takes into account the impact of inflation.

It explained that this is partly due to agricultur­al workers’ shift to low-quality, low-skilled jobs in the service sector, as the Philippine­s has for years failed to improve its manufactur­ing base that could have provided better jobs, such as in the case of East Asian neighbors.

“So what the Philippine­s really needs is to attract more investment­s that lead to jobs and producing higher productivi­ty, so that we see higher real wage increase. That’s why it is really necessary to attract investors from outside and inside for expanded capacity in manufactur­ing, and invest heavily in human capital to allow people in lower paying jobs to move from sectors like agricultur­e and low-skilled services to higher, productive jobs that are in high demand,” said Ms. Hansl.

She added that this would help guard the Philippine economy from “overheatin­g,” by which the country fails to sustain its relatively fast economic growth due to poor support from infrastruc­ture and human capital.

“This is what happens when you have high fiscal spending that is pouring into wage growth, causing people to want to spend more,” Ms. Hansl explained.

“Then prices will increase because firms cannot produce more because they have a limited capacity,” she added.

“Even if you would like to produce more, you couldn’t at this point without investing first in new productive capacity or educating more people…” she added.

“This is where the Philippine economy is: where it likes to grow more, but it first needs these investment­s.”

The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) in its January 2018 Labor Force Survey reported that unemployme­nt rate declined to 5.3% from 6.6% in the same survey round last year.

At the same time, however, underemplo­yment rate — which reflects workers who wanted more hours of work or an additional job — increased to 18% from 16.3%.

“The government needs to adopt mutually reinforcin­g policies that will create a growing middle class that is well-integrated with other income groups. This should include the implementa­tion of interventi­ons across multiple sectors that address both supply- and demandside constraint­s for creating more well-paying jobs in the labor market,” the report read.

The World Bank also urged the government to “upgrade value chains to support strong and sustainabl­e growth, and strengthen backward and forward linkages to take advantage of skilled labor and create jobs for the unskilled,” as well as address institutio­nal constraint­s, strengthen competitio­n, secure property rights, and simplify business regulation­s.

The lender expects the Philippine economy to sustain 2017’s 6.7% growth in 2018 and 2019, before slightly moderating to 6.6% in 2020. The government, in comparison, targets a 7-8% economic growth rate from 2018 to 2022, while cutting unemployme­nt rate to 3-5% also by then from 5.5% in 2016, and reducing poverty incidence to 14% from 21.6% in 2015. — Elijah J. C. Tubayan

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