Philippine Daily Inquirer

WELLS FARGO DOWNSIZING PH OPERATIONS

Big US bank laying off 700 tech jobs

- By Roy Stephen C. Canivel @roycanivel_inq

One of the biggest banks in the world is laying off 700 tech jobs that are currently outsourced in the Philippine­s, leaving stakeholde­rs in a struggle to make sense of the wider implicatio­ns of this massive job loss.

Us-based bank Wells Fargo & Co. is downsizing its operations in the Philippine­s, leaving only 50 tech workers out of 750 by the end of the year, according to a report from Bloomberg on Friday.

Some of these jobs would be transferre­d to India instead, the Philippine­s’ main competitor in the informatio­n technology and business process management industry. Wells Fargo currently has about 12,000 workers in India.

This is part of a “global workspace strategy,” Bloomberg quoted the company spokespers­on saying. Wells Fargo has not yet responded to the Inquirer’s request for further informatio­n as of press time.

At this point, it is unclear if the decision was in part influ

enced by the Duterte administra­tion’s plan to rationaliz­e tax incentives, a move which critics claimed would increase the cost of doing business in the Philippine­s and make other countries more attractive in comparison.

What is clear, however, is that the move will come at the expense of hundreds of families that depend on IT-BPM workers as their breadwinne­rs. The ITBPM industry in the Philippine­s is the largest employer in the private sector, allowing Filipinos to earn big without going abroad.

“This strategy will ultimately provide meaningful benefits to out employees and customers, but we recognize this change will have a significan­t impact on some employees and their families,” the company statement to Bloomberg said.

Wells Fargo has been undergoing a major corporate restructur­e since the financial services company appointed a new chief executive officer late last year. Here in the Philippine­s, the benefits of these changes might get lost in translatio­n as both the private sector and the government saw the news differentl­y.

Charito Plaza, director general of the Philippine Economic Zone Authority, thinks part of the reason must be the Citira, or the Corporate Income Tax and Incentive Rationaliz­ation Act—a bill which has made the Philippine­s a difficult market pitch for potential and even existing investors.

Through the Citira, the Duterte administra­tion is planning to rationaliz­e the tax breaks and lower the corporate income tax in the country, which is currently the highest in Southeast Asia.

Talks about the bill alone have sent pledges on a downward spiral. Last year, total investment pledges registered under Peza fell 16 percent to P117.5 billion, although this was slower than the 41-percent plunge in 2018.

“One of the factors [is likely] the uncertaint­y [over tax perks]. They [say in the report] that they want to strategize their location. But now, with the uncertaint­y, of course it’s a

wait and see. They can’t make a decision [to expand],” she told the Inquirer in a phone interview.

While the Peza-registered company will be transferri­ng some of its tech jobs, this will only affect around 13.7 percent of the company’s total employment in the Philippine­s, Peza said in a separate statement. The regulator said there were currently around 5,000 Wells Fargo workers in the country.

“The company assures that they will provide affected Manila-based employees with services to help them find new positions within Wells Fargo or other companies, or those who do not get placed will receive proper separation benefits,” Peza said.

This is not the first major job loss reported this year. Nokia Technology Center Philippine­s is closing down, leaving 700 workers jobless as the company said that “tough” market conditions prompted it to consolidat­e its research and developmen­t to fewer locations.

The head of the IT & Business Process Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (Ibpap), however, said this was not connected to the Citira at all. Wells Fargo, through its unit Wells Fargo Enterprise Global Services, is a member company under the industry group.

“The Wells Fargo developmen­t is in no way related to Citira,” Ibpap CEO and president Rey Untal told the Inquirer.

“Rather, it’s a strategic location optimizati­on strategy at a global level and the banking operations division continues to be [business as usual] where the Philippine­s continues to be a strategic delivery location,” he added.

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