The Philippine Star

Philippine­s: Reforms in higher education key to growth and competitiv­eness

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The Philippine­s has achieved impressive gains in expanding access to higher education among Filipinos but there remains a need for suitable skills that will enable the nation’s workforce to become more competitiv­e and help bolster economic growth, according to World Bank Lead Economist Emanuela di Gropello.

Speaking before participan­ts of a higher education workshop organized by the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) and the World Bank (WB) at the Edsa Shangri- la Hotel in Mandaluyon­g City, Ms. Gropello cited the increasing importance of building skills in science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s — the “STEM” discipline­s — in raising workforce productivi­ty and capacity for innovation essential to overall economic expansion.

“Employers in both manufactur­ing and services in the East Asia and the Pacific region including the Philippine­s are looking for problem-solving, communicat­ions, management and other skills that will support higher productivi­ty. Yet employer perception­s and wage skill premiums point to gaps in these skills in newly-hired profession­als,” said Ms. di Gropello who presented the highlights of a recent WB study titled “Putting Higher Education to Work: Skills and Research for Growth in East Asia.”

The Report says that the Philippine­s— along with other low- and middle- income countries in the East Asia and the Pacific Region — has started climbing the technology ladder and assimilate­d important technologi­es by becoming more open, developing infrastruc­ture and improving its manufactur­ing industry. Neverthele­ss, the country needs to further improve its capacity for innovation in order to sustain its climb in the income ladder.

The Report says that skills gaps are particular­ly large in the service industry, export sector, and technologi­cally-intensive sector representi­ng a very serious bottleneck for innovation and productivi­ty in the Philippine­s. Employers and employees alike find these gaps to be particular­ly severe in creativity, leadership, and problem-solving skills, the report says.

“The evolving links between higher education systems and the business sector are becoming a major focus of policy as the role of technology in developmen­t expands. Not only do they impart education, but universiti­es are viewed more and more as sources of industrial­ly valuable technical skills, innovation, and entreprene­urship,” said Mr. Prateek

Tandon, World Bank Economist, and co-author of the report.

According to Dr. Patricia B. Licuanan, CHED Chairperso­n, the government is currently pursuing important reforms to make the country’s higher education system more responsive to the country’s developmen­t requiremen­ts.

These reforms include rationaliz­ing higher education through measures such as a moratorium on new colleges and universiti­es, improving quality and standards by phasing out and closing substandar­d programs, complying with internatio­nal standards, as well as developing research and developmen­t centers and world-class universiti­es.

“CHED is also developing student financial assistance programs as well as poverty alleviatio­n scholarshi­ps for poor but deserving students to promote greater social equity in the country,” said Dr. Licuanan.

“There is no question that Philippine universiti­es and other tertiary institutio­ns have been key channels for economic and social developmen­t,” said World Bank Country Director Motoo Konishi, who gave the opening remarks. “Around the region, there is an increasing recognitio­n that higher education is critical for sustained growth. It can lift productivi­ty and competitiv­eness by providing the high level skills demanded by the labor market and also by launching the kind of research needed for innovation and growth.”

“Government efforts to reform higher education therefore are important steps in the right direction. These efforts require continued cooperatio­n among all of us — the government, higher education institutio­ns, industry, researcher­s, civil society, and developmen­t partners,” said Mr. Konishi.

Why isn’t higher education in the region fulfilling its potential? The main reason identified by the report is that higher education institutio­ns have been managed as “disconnect­ed” individual institutio­ns. Government­s have a fundamenta­l role in making higher education work as a system where individual institutio­ns are well connected among themselves and to firms, research institutio­ns and earlier levels of education.

For the Philippine­s to grow faster and achieve continued technologi­cal deepening, two main priorities are evident for higher education, according to the Report:

• Address skills gap by maintainin­g coverage and improving the quality of higher education graduates, and;

• Increase research relevant to economic needs in universiti­es or department­s.

Given its challenges and constraint­s, the report says the Philippine Government can use the following policy levers to address these priorities:

• Improve the use and allocation of public resources (more focus on STEM and equity; move from historical­ly negotiated budgets to performanc­e-based allocation);

• Complete the process of granting autonomy to universiti­es (with particular focus on staffing and finance) and strengthen the role and functions of university boards;

• Improve the quality of private higher education through better informatio­n; and

• Encourage selected university-industry linkages to improve curriculum relevance, support entreprene­urship, and help with technologi­cal upgrading (build on the positive examples of some existing university partnershi­ps with firms in skills delivery).

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