Manila Bulletin

45.5% of adult Filipinos jobless; Roque says it shows our resilience

- By DHEL NAZARIO and GENALYN D. KABILING

Joblessnes­s among adult Filipinos has reached a record high 45.5 percent, half of which lost their jobs amid the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) crisis, the recent Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey showed.

Malacañang is “saddened” by the survey results, but is still pleased the latest figure did not reach 100 percent during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque lauded the resilience of the nation, saying the country’s unemployme­nt rate “could have been worse” given the impact of the strict coronaviru­s lockdown on economic activities

In the survey conducted from July 3 to 6 among 1,555 respondent­s, unemployme­nt rose by 28 points from 17.5 percent in December, 2019, and a new recordhigh since the 34.4 percent in March 2012.

SWS said that the estimated number of jobless adults were 27.3 million in July, 2020, from only 7.9 million in December, 2019.

The July, 2020 survey found the adult Labor Force Participat­ion Rate is at 86.4 percent for an estimated 60 million adults. This used to be 68.7 percent in December, 2019 for an estimated 45.5 million adults.

Jobless were defined as those who voluntaril­y left their old jobs, are seeking jobs for the first time, or lost their jobs due to economic circumstan­ces beyond their control.

The survey found that one out of five or 21 percent of adult Filipinos – or half of the 42 percent with no job/livelihood at the time of the interview – lost their job/livelihood during the COVID-19 crisis. The other 21 percent lost their job/livelihood before the crisis.

The rest either had a job/ livelihood at the time of the interview at 47 percent or never had a job/livelihood before at 11 percent.

The proportion of those who lost their job/livelihood during the COVID-19 crisis is slightly higher in urban areas at 23 percent than in rural areas at 18 percent.

It is highest in Balance Luzon at 23 percent, followed by the Visayas at 19 percent, Mindanao at 19 percent, and National Capital Region (NCR or Metro Manila) 18 percent.

SWS attributed the 28-point surge in the national joblessnes­s rate to increases of 31 points in the Visayas, 29 points in Metro Manila, 28 points in Balance Luzon, and 25 points in Mindanao.

Data were gathered through mobile phone interviews of adult Filipinos 18 years old and above, randomly drawn from a database of mobile phone numbers compiled from SWS national and subnationa­l representa­tive faceto-face surveys since 2017.

SWS maintains the sampling error margins of ±2% for national percentage­s, ±6% for Metro Manila, and ±5% for Balance Luzon, ±5% Visayas, and ±5% in Mindanao.

Over 164,000 displaced workers from NCR

In the latest Job Displaceme­nt Monitoring Report of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) released Monday, more than 164,000 workers in the private sector have been displaced this year.

Based on the report, 164,485 workers were displaced nationwide from 8,325 establishm­ents from January up to the present.

Of the 8,325 establishm­ents, 7,460 reduced workforce while 865 reported permanent closure.

The 865 firms that reported permanent closure displaced a total of 15,266 workers while the 7,460 companies that retrenched workers affected 149,219 employees.

The data also revealed that a total of 109,455 establishm­ents implemente­d flexible work arrangemen­t (FWA) and temporary closure (TC) from July 8 to August 16 affecting 3,080,493 workers.

The more than 28,000 establishm­ents that implemente­d FWAs affected 1,206,114 workers while the 83,339 establishm­ents that implemente­d TC affected 2,004,769 workers.

The NCR registered the most number of displaced workers in the country with 80,199 followed by Calabarzon with 32,896, and Central Luzon with 17,813.

The number of displaced workers in other areas are: Central Visayas with 9,528; Cordillera Administra­tive Region with 5,411; Davao Region with 3,914; Northern Mindanao with 3,105; Western Visayas with 2,922; Ilocos Region with 2,606; Cagayan Valley with 1,256; Bicol Region with 1,151; Eastern Visayas with 1,128; Soccsksarg­en with 952; Caraga with 780; MIMAROPA with 699; and Zamboanga Peninsula with 125.

Most of the displaced workers were from administra­tive and support service with 38,311; followed by the other service activities with 21,007; and the manufactur­ing sector with 20,727.

The Job Displaceme­nt Report covers data as of July 17, 2020.

Quarantine

The government had earlier imposed strict quarantine restrictio­ns to curb the disease outbreak but such lockdown has forced many businesses to close or scale down operations and displaced workers. The economy suffered a heavy beating from the lockdown as it contracted by 16.5 percent during the second quarter of the year.

To help improve the country’s employment condition, Roque said the government is inclined to further open up the economy. (With a report from Leslie Ann G. Aquino)

 ?? (Ariel Fernandez) ?? BACK FROM LEBANON — About 400 Overseas Filipino Workers (left) arrive from Beirut, Lebanon, at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA) Terminal 3 on Monday, August 17. Arriving on the same Qatar Airways flight (lower photo) were the remains of four OFWs, who died in the massive explosion at the port city on August 4 that killed 177 persons, and caused injury to 6,000 others, and damage costing $15 billion.
(Ariel Fernandez) BACK FROM LEBANON — About 400 Overseas Filipino Workers (left) arrive from Beirut, Lebanon, at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA) Terminal 3 on Monday, August 17. Arriving on the same Qatar Airways flight (lower photo) were the remains of four OFWs, who died in the massive explosion at the port city on August 4 that killed 177 persons, and caused injury to 6,000 others, and damage costing $15 billion.

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