PH must 'skill up' its labor force
Job and Employment

PH must 'skill up' its labor force

Jan 10, 2025, 4:45 AM
Rose De La Cruz

Rose De La Cruz

Writer/Columnist

Despite its burgeoning working-age population– compared to aging workers in most economies– much has to be done in skilling up through education and job preparation this demographic advantage, suggested the World Economic Forum in its Future of Jobs Report 2025.

While many high-income countries have aging populations and shrinking labor forces, the Philippines continues to enjoy an expanding working-age demographic, which is an advantage as industries worldwide get transformed by technology, climate change and economic shifts, the WEF report was quoted by Business World.

“Many economies’ actual ability to leverage demographic dividends will depend on their accompanying success or otherwise, in inclusive job creation,” WEF's January 8 report said.

This potential can only be unlocked if investments are made in education and skill development to enhance talent availability. (Unfortunately, a vital component of Department of Education's upskilling program, computerization, has suffered a P10-billion slash in the 2025 budget).

Employers around the world in the WEF survey identified the top five public policy priorities to enhance talent availability in the Philippines. At the top is flexibility in hiring and firing practices (with 57 percent), provision of reskilling and upskilling (52 percent), funding for reskilling and upskilling (48 percent), improvements in public education systems (48 percent) and changes to immigration laws (44 percent).

Two-thirds of employers in the Philippines identified skill gaps as a significant barrier to business growth in the next five years, prompting many to scale up reskilling initiatives.

The upskilling and reskilling outlook showed that 32 of 100 Filipino workers would not need training by 2030, 28 will be upskilled in their present roles, 29 will be upskilled and redeployed and 10 were unlikely to upskill.

“Employers operating in the Philippines anticipate that almost three in 10 workers will be upskilled and then redeployed to new roles,” it added.

The study also showed the top core skills in 2025 and the skills expected to grow the most by 2030 in the Philippines. These are skills in artificial intelligence (AI) and big data at 85 percent, followed by resilience, flexibility and agility (77 percent), creative thinking (76 percent), networks and cybersecurity (73 percent) and technological literacy (65 percent).

It said technology-related roles are the fastest-growing jobs in percentage terms. These include professionals such as big data specialists, fintech engineers, AI and machine learning specialists and software and application developers.

In the next decade, about 1.2 billion young people in emerging economies would become working-age adults, the WEF said, citing the World Bank.

The job market in these economies is only expected to create 420 million new jobs, leaving nearly 800 million young people in economic uncertainty.

Aging and expanding working-age populations are the two demographic shifts seen transforming global economies and labor markets, according to the report.

Higher-income economies predominantly have aging working-age populations, while lower-income economies like the Philippines are experiencing expanding working-age populations.

“These trends drive an increase in demand for skills in talent management, teaching and mentoring, and motivation and self-awareness,” it said.

“Aging populations drive growth in healthcare jobs such as nursing professionals, while growing working-age populations fuel growth in education-related professions, such as higher education teachers,” it added.

The report gathered insights from more than 1,000 global employers, representing more than 14 million workers across 22 industries and 55 economies.

The report also explored how macroeconomic trends will affect jobs and skills, and outlined workforce transformation strategies employers plan to implement from 2025 to 2030.

#PhEmployment #UpSkill #OpinYonNews


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