RP deploying fewer maids, more professionals

Published by rudy Date posted on June 9, 2009

THE country is sending fewer domestics to Hong Kong, Singapore and Italy, where Indonesian women are willing to work for less than the $400 a month that Filipinos charge, Labor officials said yesterday.

They said state policy encouraging higher-skilled jobs had also cut the number of Filipino domestics to Hong Kong to 18,286 in 2008 from 22,127 in 2007, a decline of 17 percent. Deployment of domestics dropped 20.7 percent in Singapore and 42.7 percent in Italy in the same period.

“Our focus is on the deployment of professional and highly skilled workers, which lessens the [number of] vulnerable … workers coming from the Philippines,” said Leo Cacdac, deputy administrator of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration.

That focus had also reduced the proportion of women sent abroad to work, to 48 percent in 2008 from 60 percent in 2006, added acting Labor Secretary Lourdes Trasmonte.

Speaking at the Migrant Workers Day celebration, Trasmonte said deployments overseas had increased despite predictions of a decline.

“Amidst global joblessness we now send a record-breaking 3,386 Filipinos each… day to gainful jobs abroad,” Trasmonte said. That compares with 3,170 a day early last year, Labor statistics show.

The number of foreign employers registered with the agency rose 6.6 percent to 21,286 last year, generating 637,476 job orders or 5.1 percent more than the previous year’s, Trasmonte said.

Last year, the agency also sent nine marketing missions to Canada, Taiwan, Romania, Bulgaria, Taiwan, Australia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates to generate more jobs for Filipinos, she said.

The agency will also lead a three-day job fair on June 14.

To protect workers, the administration has also launched a new campaign against illegal recruiters. –Gigi Muñoz David, Manila Standard Today

June 2025

Philippine Environment Month!
“Action for Nature, for the Future!”


Invoke Article 33 of the ILO Constitution
against the military junta in Myanmar
to carry out the 2021 ILO Commission of Inquiry recommendations
against serious violations of
Forced Labour and Freedom of Association protocols.

Accept National Unity Government (NUG)
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Monthly Observances:

  1 Jun – World Day of Parents

  5 Jun – World Environment Day 

  7 Jun – World Food Safety Day 

  8 Jun – World Oceans Day

12 Jun – World Day Against
Child Labour

15 Jun – World Elder Abuse Awareness Day 

16 Jun – International Day of Family Remittances 

17 Jun – World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought

20 Jun – World Refugee Day 

25 Jun – Day of the Seafarer 

27 Jun – Micro-, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Day

 

Daily Observances:

First Saturday of July:
International Cooperative Day
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