Philippine Daily Inquirer

Jobless Pinoys hit 12.1M

SWS: Unemployme­nt rate rose to 27.5% in Q4

- Reports from Rafael L. Antonio and Kathleen de Villa, Inquirer Research; and Christian V. Esguerra

THE NUMBER of unemployed Filipinos in the last quarter of 2013 swelled to more than 12 million, making the 7.2percent growth in the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) last year, considered the second fastest after China, far from inclusive.

The unemployme­nt rate rose to 27.5 percent, or an estimated 12.1 million individual­s, as 2.5 million Filipinos joined the ranks of the jobless between September and December, a Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey found.

The level of joblessnes­s across the country was almost 6 points higher than the 21.7 percent (some 9.6 million) in the previous quarter, results of the SWS survey conducted from Dec. 11 to 16 showed. The results were first published in BusinessWo­rld.

Nikka Policarpio, 19, who graduated from University of Santo Tomas last year with a degree in journalism, is among the millions of unemployed.

Nearly a year after college, Policarpio is already in between jobs since she left her first job last month as a marketing com-

munication­s specialist.

“I have been applying at different media companies for less than a month now... I want to take a rest before I start working again,” said Policarpio, who resigned from her nine-month stint with a cosmetics company because the low compensati­on did not match the heavy workload.

The high unemployme­nt rate despite the high GDP growth may have contribute­d to the pessimisti­c outlook of Filipinos last December.

A survey by another polling outfit, Pulse Asia, found that 55 percent of Filipinos felt the national quality of life deteriorat­ed in the past 12 months. They also expected the situation to remain the same for the whole of 2014.

‘Understand­able’

Malacañang yesterday described as “understand­able” the findings of the SWS survey.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Edwin Lacierda pointed to calamities that hit the country last year to help “explain” why unemployme­nt rate increased to 27.5 percent at the end of 2013.

Lacierda cited Supertypho­on “Yolanda” (internatio­nal name: Haiyan), which devastated central Philippine­s last November, and the 7.2-magnitude earthquake that hit Bohol and Cebu provinces amonth earlier.

According to the Genevabase­d Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, some 6 million workers saw their livelihood destroyed or disrupted as a result of Yolanda.

Lacierda said the siege of Zamboanga City by Nur Misuari’s followers “also disrupted” economic activity in the area.

“Certainly, it’s very unfortunat­e that these things happened, but we have to rise up. That is the role of government: To provide for its people,” he said.

‘Bloodied but unbowed’

“We were bloodied but unbowed,” Lacierda added, borrowing the words of William Ernest Henley’s poem, “Invictus.” Despite the increase in the unemployme­nt rate, Lacierda said the government would “continue to ensure that our people find employment.”

The latest jobless rate, however, was below the 34.4 percent posted in March 2012.

The unemployme­nt rate has mostly remained over 20 percent since May 2005, according to SWS. It was under 15 percent from 1993 to March 2004, and was within 16.5 percent to 19 percent from August 2004 to March 2005.

Different definition­s

The SWS definition of unemployme­nt covers respondent­s aged 18 and above who are “without a job at present and looking for a job.” This excludes those not looking for work such as housewives, students and retired or disabled persons.

This is different from the offi- cial definition in the Labor Force Survey (LFS), which covers persons 15 years and over who are reported not working, looking for work and available for work.

The government’s latest LFS put the official unemployme­nt rate at 6.5 percent (about 2.6 million Filipinos) as of October 2013.

The SWS survey also found that 40 percent of respondent­s believed there would be more jobs in the next 12 months, 31 percent claimed the number of available jobs would remain the same, while 21 percent expected fewer jobs.

Unemployme­nt picked up sharply among men (from 13.4 percent to 21.2 percent) but remained higher among women (from 32.4 percent to 35.9 percent).

Highest among 18-24

Across age groups, joblessnes­s remained highest among those 18-24 years old (52.3 percent). It was 33.1 percent in the 25-34 age bracket, 25 percent in the 35-44 age bracket and 17.7 percent among those 45 years old and older.

The nationwide unemployme­nt included those who were retrenched (10.4 percent), resigned from their jobs (13.5 percent), and first-time job seekers (3.5 percent).

‘Endo’

Of those retrenched, 6.8 percent did not have their contracts renewed (also called “endo” or end of contract, usually after six months so that the workers won’t be regularize­d and the employer won’t pay benefits), 1.6 percent had employers whose businesses ceased operations and 2 percent were laid off.

The survey, which used faceto-face interviews with 1,550 Filipinos, had a margin of error of plus-or-minus 2.5 percentage points.

 ?? LEO M. SABANGAN III ?? JOB SEEKERS Two women apply for work at a BPO company inMandaluy­ong City. SocialWeat­her Stations says that the unemployme­nt rate in the last quarter of 2013 rose almost 6 points to 27.5 percent, equivalent to 12.1million Filipinos.
LEO M. SABANGAN III JOB SEEKERS Two women apply for work at a BPO company inMandaluy­ong City. SocialWeat­her Stations says that the unemployme­nt rate in the last quarter of 2013 rose almost 6 points to 27.5 percent, equivalent to 12.1million Filipinos.
 ?? INQGRAPHIC BY ALBERT RODRIGUEZ AND RAFAEL ANTONIO ??
INQGRAPHIC BY ALBERT RODRIGUEZ AND RAFAEL ANTONIO

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