Manila Bulletin

218,639 job vacancies in gov’t bared

- By MARIO B. CASAYURAN

A total of 218,639 positions in national government offices remain vacant.

Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph G. Recto bared this yesterday while asking the Aquino administra­tion to fill up the vacancies to ease joblessnes­s, especially among the youth, which accounts for one in three unemployed throughout the country.

He said the bureaucrac­y could also absorb the largest sector in the nation’s unemployed pool – some 536,072 who have college diplomas – if it starts filling up the vacancies.

Recto, an economist, said there is a huge talent pool which can be tapped.

Of the 1,513,695 total permanent job positions in the national government, only 1,295,056 would be occupied this year, leaving a vacancy of 218,639, he pointed out.

“There’s almost a quarter of a million unfilled positions in the national government plantilla,” he said. The number excludes unfilled personnel items

in local government­s and government­owned and -controlled corporatio­ns (GOCCs).

Recto, a member of the Senate Finance Committee, said Congress has allocated 16.9 billion in the 3.002-trillion national budget for 2016 to fund some but not all unfilled items, while 7.7 billion has likewise been authorized for new positions.

“But it doesn’t mean that hiring will be limited by what these amounts allow because items vacated due to promotion, resignatio­n, or retirement, and which will be taken over by an employee already in the service, are already funded by regular personal services allocation,” Recto said.

Among the agencies which will recruit a big number of personnel this year are the Department of Health (DOH) and Department of Education (DepEd).

The DOH is scheduled to sign in 21,118, including 946 doctors, 15,727 nurses, 3,100 midwives, 308 medical technologi­sts, 324 dentists at a payroll cost of 7 billion.

The DepEd, on the other hand, will create 62,320 teaching positions.

Other agencies that have posted hiring notices are the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), which initially needs 1,396 civil engineers, and the Philippine National Police (PNP), as part of ongoing efforts to fill 22,684 vacant slots, mostly non-commission­ed officer items.

The Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) also needs project developmen­t officers to manage its growing social protection portfolio.

A reading of the Staffing Summary, a document which details the number of personnel in the national government, shows “the dimension of unfilled positions,” he said.

“While not all of these slots must be filled urgently, in fact there may be no need to fill some of them, for reasons of efficiency and economy, they still show career opportunit­ies in public service for those with the qualificat­ions and the drive to take them,” he explained.

“In the case of DepEd, despite its massive recruitmen­t, it will still end the year with 64,963 vacant positions,” he said.

The Department of Agricultur­e (DA) and its attached agencies have 4,633 unfilled positions, while the Commission on Audit (COA) only has 7,752 items filled out of 14,102.

On paper, there are 2,729 vacant fireman positions in the Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP), while the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) lists 1,108.

The judiciary has 9,914 vacant posts, with only 25,152 out of 35,066 positions filled. Under the General Appropriat­ions Act, however, it has the autonomy to create new positions, transfer an item, or make other adjustment­s in the personal services administra­tion.

The DENR has less than half of its authorized positions filled, or 9,675 out of 19,510, as reported in the 2016 Staffing Summary.

Recto explained that not all positions would be filled as some of these may have been deemed redundant. “And besides, it takes taxpayer’s money to fund them. Money saved on payroll can be used for operations and projects.”

He stressed that frontline agencies or offices with critical functions, “must be occupied by warm bodies, in the interest of public service.”

In the government’s October, 2015 Labor Force Survey, 32 percent of the estimated 2.372 million unemployed were in the 25-34 age bracket.

In addition, 35.9 percent of the jobless attended college, with 22.6 percent, or 536,072, having completed it.

Academics and labor leaders, however, have pointed out that to arrive at the real unemployme­nt rate, the underemplo­yed must be counted, which numbered 7.021 million in the October job count, thus bringing the jobless number to 9.393 million, or 23.3 percent of the nation’s workforce, Recto pointed out.

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