The Philippine Star

Labor group alarmed by DTI’s bleak projection­s for workers

- By SHEILA CRISOSTOMO

The labor group Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippine­s (ALU-TUCP) yesterday expressed concern over the recent pronouncem­ent of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) that millions of workers could lose their jobs due to automation.

According to ALU-TUCP executive vice president Gerard Seno, the government unemployme­nt insurance schemes or programs should help displaced workers and minimize the impact of the automation or the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

“We can confirm that workers – particular­ly in agricultur­e, retail and manufactur­ing – are now being impacted with only one employee left operating a machine in a production line that used to be manned by 5-10 workers,” he said.

Based on online Encycloped­ia Britannica, the Fourth Industrial Revolution “heralds a series of social, political, cultural and economic upheavals that will unfold over the 21st century.”

Built on the widespread availabili­ty of digital technologi­es that were the result of the Third Industrial, or Digital, Revolution, this era will be “driven largely by the convergenc­e of digital, biological and physical innovation­s.”

Seno noted that with enterprise­s resorting to “robotics, automation and artificial intelligen­ce (AI) in selling products and services,” workers stand to lose their jobs to the detriment of their and their families’ welfare and future.

He said the affected workers might have difficulty coping through training for new skills needed to adapt to the innovation if government will not be able to provide adequate and inexpensiv­e programs to train the soon to be displaced workers.

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