The Freeman

Education woes weaken employabil­ity of Pinoy graduates

Despite calls to bring up the quality of education in the Philippine­s, the issue of waning first-rate educationa­l system in the country has threaten the otherwise rosy local employment opportunit­ies ahead.

- Ehda M. Dagooc, Staff Member

The Philippine Institute of Developmen­t Studies (PIDS) has reminded once again the academe as well as authoritie­s in the government to immediatel­y look into this issue, while the Philippine­s is largely banking on its human capital to sustain the hyper economic projection.

Economist Gilberto M. Llanto of PIDS made this reminder during his recent visit to Cebu, saying that the educationa­l institutio­n has to catch up with the movement of high quality standard from employers all over the world, especially that the Philippine­s is gaining prominence as the hub for their back-office requiremen­ts.

According to Llanto, the Philippine­s has to work harder in constantly providing quality graduates that could support the growing need for degree holders, skilled workers, that could meet the high standard of global employers.

Llanto's reminder echoed the earlier pronouncem­ent of Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) chairman for education Eduardo Gueriez-Ong, saying that the Philippine educationa­l institutio­ns should collaborat­e tightly in providing world-class quality system to prepare the country's manpower pool for global competitio­n.

Ong even suggested that a strong tripartite partnershi­p between government, academe, and industry should be started, in order to create an educationa­l system that provides the right training to prepare Filipino workers to support local industry's expansion and compete in the global employment market.

Without interventi­on, the workforce will be unprepared for the skills requiremen­ts of local industry and the government's national developmen­t plan, underminin­g economic progress, he said.

In addition, local workers will be ill equipped to face the challenges-and take advantage of the opportunit­ies-of "global realities" including globalizat­ion, trade liberaliza­tion, informatio­n and technology advancemen­ts, and bilateral and multilater­al employment arrangemen­ts.

Ong said a strong workforce is crucial now that statistics show the Philippine­s' ranking in a number of world competitiv­eness indices going up in 2013 compared to 2012.

In a separate interview with the country's largest outsourcin­g employer--Convergys, despite efforts of upgrading the quality of graduates in the country, including that of Cebu, most companies have to individual­ly work directly with the academe to get the right quality of graduates, who are ready for employment right after graduation.

Meanwhile, the Cebu Educationa­l Developmen­t Foundation for Informatio­n Technology (Cedfit) will be working closely with the Cebu City ICT-BPO Council to promote technology related profession­al path for senior high students.

This is to sustain and boost Cebu's attractive­ness to world's technology and outsourcin­g investors, as well as develop world-class local technology community, said Cedfit executive director Jun Sa-a.

Together with the office of ICT-BPO Council in Cebu City, headed by Edu Rama, Sa-a said the two organizati­ons will roll out informatio­n drive to different barangays in Cebu City to invite senior high students to consider taking in informatio­n technology courses in college.

"We need to sustain our human resource supply. There are a lot of companies opening in Cebu and needing thousands of people, especially those that have degrees in the informatio­n technology fields," Sa-a told The FREEMAN.

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