Philippine Daily Inquirer

ARE WORKERS BETTER OFF?

- CIELITO F. HABITO

Good news: The country’s unemployme­nt rate this year so far is lower than it was a year ago. Not-so-good news: Even so, we lost hundreds of thousands of jobs over the past year. More regions actually had their unemployme­nt rate go up than those where it went down. Also, one out of five unemployed was actually a college graduate.

Good news: The underemplo­yment rate is significan­tly down from a year ago. Not-sogood news: This is probably mainly because we lost nearly 2 million jobs in agricultur­e, the sector with the most underemplo­yment. But five regions saw underemplo­yment actually go up, and quite substantia­lly in two of them.

Good news: The overall quality of jobs has further improved in the past year. Not-sogood news: The number of small enterprise­s significan­tly went down in the same period, when we should be having much more of them if we are to have more inclusive growth.

The results of the quarterly Labor Force Survey of the Philippine Statistics Authority for January 2019 were released earlier this month, and as summed up above, it had the usual mix of good and not-so-good news. More than the data on gross domestic product (GDP) that measures aggregate output and income, the jobs data give us a clearer picture of trends in the wellbeing of Filipino families, which hinges on the quantity and quality of jobs in the economy. It is thus interestin­g and worthwhile to examine the numbers behind the above observatio­ns more closely.

How could the economy have unemployme­nt rate go down (from 5.3 percent last year to 5.2 percent now) even as the number of jobs actually went down significan­tly (by nearly 400,000 jobs)? The answer lies in the labor force participat­ion rate, or the percentage of working-age (15 years and up) people who are either working or actively seeking work. Those who are 15 years old and older are not part of the labor force if they are in school, or are not seeking work either because they don’t need or want to, or have given up out of frustratio­n due to difficulty in finding one.

The data show labor force participat­ion rate declining from 62.2 percent last year to 60.2 percent now. Is this good or bad? It’s a good thing if it means that more 15-year-olds are in school (because the K-to-12 program keeps them there rather than begin searching for jobs), or if better incomes have made it unnecessar­y for both spouses in a family to work. But it would be bad news if it means that more frustrated job seekers have simply stopped looking. This could more likely happen in our farm areas, considerin­g the loss of 1.9 million jobs in agricultur­e. Unfortunat­ely, the data can’t tell us which is which.

What is clear from the data is that nine out of 17 regions actually had worse unemployme­nt, led by the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, which saw unemployme­nt rate shoot up from 2.6 to 6.3 percent, likely traceable to the Marawi conflict. Beneficiar­ies of lower unemployme­nt included Metro Manila, Ilocos, Cagayan Valley, Calabarzon, Central and Western Visayas, and Davao Region. Also disturbing is how 21 percent of the jobless were college graduates, implying a continuing jobs-skills mismatch that needs attention.

Underemplo­yment is significan­tly down (from 18 to 15.6 percent), and 3.2 million workers actually shifted from part-time to fulltime work (40 hours a week). But Eastern Visayas and Soccsksarg­en had hefty 5-percentage-point increases in underemplo­yment, which also rose in the Cordillera­s, Central Luzon and Zamboanga Peninsula.

Wageand salary workers nowmake up twothirds (65.8 percent) of our workers, whereas they were less than half 15 years ago. Unpaid family workers now make up only 4.7 percent from nearly 14 percent of all workers 15 years ago, with a reduction of close to a million over the past year alone. But what bothers me is that there were 145,000 less of those who are selfemploy­ed with employees, or small business owners. Our policy and business environmen­t that remains unfriendly to small businesses is an area where we have much more homework to do. After all, we don’t only want our people, especially the young ones, to find jobs; we also want many of them to be creating jobs.

———— cielito.habito@gmail.com

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