work4pinoy start page
 
 
  January 29, 2012: PH should not pin hopes on BPO, says think tank

The Philippine government should not pin too much hope on call centers and other business process outsourcing (BPO) companies as a means of boosting local employment and the economy, warned the independent think tank Ibon Foundation.
Ibon, which advocates nationalist industrialization, said United States President Barack Obama’s recent statements calling outsourced jobs back to the US highlighted the risk of relying on BPOs.
Ibon warned of this and other adverse trends facing the BPO sector, adding that the money that the government intends to spend to promote it would be better used to support Filipino industry and science and technology.
The Philippines s a popular location for call centers and other outsourced services, and has edged out India as the world’s leading BPO center. Some government leaders have even gone so far as to suggest that education be geared towards providing the manpower for BPOs.
In a statement, Ibon foundation noted the government had set aside P575 million in subsidies for private foreign BPO investors, with the money going to training, curriculum and teacher development, career marketing and scholarships.
It could think of better ways to spend the money, Ibon said.
“These funds are more productively spent supporting Filipino industry, science and technology that for a sector that is such a small part of the economy and by its nature will never give much added value,” it said.
“The BPO sector is barely integrated into the local economy outside of its relatively few jobs and so does not stimulate or encourage domestic production,” it added.
According to Ibon, Obama’s move to bring outsourced jobs back to the US underscores the dangers relying on BPOs and foreign economies for jobs Filipinos.
”Even if is still unclear it President Obama’s proposed ‘insourcing’ legislation will pass, the vulnerability of the sector and the government’s misplaced attention to this is increasingly apparent,” it said.
The Business Processing Association of the Philippines (BPAP) said, However, that it was not alarmed and noted that outsourcing had allowed US companies to survive and grow amid the global financial crisis.
Ibon countered that even if Obama’s “insourcing” plan – which some dismiss as an election ploy – does not come to pass the BPO industry is nevertheless facing setbacks.
The BPO sector has been growing, but the group said his has slowed slightly. It said the 21.9-percent growth in BPAP-related jobs in 2011 was slight slower than the 24.1 percent growth in 2010. The 22.5 percent growth in revenues was also slower than the 25.3 percent growth in 2010.
It is also said that government and industry estimates for the BPO industry at 1.3 million jobs and $25 billion in revenues in 2016 was too optimistic. It noted that an earlier plan to generate one million jobs and $12 billion in revenue in 2010 fell short of the target. Only 525,000 jobs and $8.9 billion in revenue materialized, it said.
Ibon further said that the slowing global and US economy appeared to have affected the BPO industry, despite reports that the Philippines have overtaken India as the world’s leading BPO center.
“Developments in the US economy are particularly relevant because the latest Bangko Sentral ng Plipinas data notes that the US accounts for 72 percent for foreign investment and 80 percent for BPO service exports,” it said.
It also noted that the development trend of Filipino nurses in the US dropped between 2008 and 2010, and Obama had campaigned for prioritizing American nurses over migrants. The US congress has already approved a bill that would reduce the number of visas allowed for temporary registered nurses.

Source: Philippine Daily Inquirer - January 29, 2012

Jobs + Resumes

Today Philippines:

0 job ads

Today international:

3109835 job ads
6 resumes

NEWS

March 7, 2020
Huge job losses seen due to COVID-19 ..... [more]

March 6, 2020
Underemployment down in January ..... [more]

March 4, 2020
Concentrix hiring 6,000 more workers ..... [more]

CONTACT