RP suffers from brain drain, loses the best to other countries

Published by rudy Date posted on August 6, 2010

The Philippines is suffering a crippling brain drain with many of its most talented and qualified workers heading overseas for higher paying jobs and better lifestyles, employers said. The shock resignations last week of 25 Philippine Airlines (PAL) pilots, who left for bigger salaries abroad, highlighted a trend that is changing the stereotype of overseas Filipinos simply being maids, sailors and laborers.

Scientists, engineers, doctors, Information Technology specialists, accountants and even teachers are among the English-speaking talent heading to foreign lands, leaving the government and private companies scrambling to find replacements.

“There is a skills hemorrhage. We are losing workers in the highly professional and skilled categories,” Vicente Leogardo, director general of the Employers’ Confederation of the Philippines, told Agence France-Presse.

The pilots who quit for jobs in the Middle East and elsewhere in Asia would have in some cases nearly tripled their salaries, Airline Pilots Association of the Philippines President Elmer Pena told Agence France-Presse.

“The salary here is a lot smaller than in other countries. You can’t really compare it,” he said.

Civil engineer Paris Chuchana joined the exodus two years ago when he moved his family to Singapore so he could take a job earning about $1,600 a month, five times more than the maximum salary he could expect at home.

Like many expatriates, Chuchana enjoys the lifestyle outside his homeland, which suffers from pervasive corruption, poor infrastructure and frequent natural disasters.

“I was just on vacation, visiting my aunt here, but I found I liked it, so I resigned from my job in the Philippines and came over,” Chuchana told Agence France-Presse by telephone from Singapore, saying that he had no intention of returning home soon.

“My first kid is entering high school so I am already preparing for college,” Chuchana added.

The nine million Filipinos who work overseas—about one tenth of the nation’s population—in both high and low-skilled sectors undoubtedly play a crucial role in propping up the nation’s sputtering economy.

Last year, they sent home $17.3 billion to relatives or for investment, making up more than 10 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP), according to government data.

GDP is the total value of goods and services produced in a country in a year.

But PAL’s recent woes have highlighted the costs.

The carrier said that its hopes for turning a profit this financial year had gone down because the pilot walkout had forced some flights to be cancelled.

Other organizations recently reported similar brain-drain pain.

Not spared

The government weather bureau Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) was heavily criticized last month after it failed to predict the full force of Typhoon Basyang (international codename: Conson) that killed dozens of people.

In its appeal for understanding, Pagasa said it did not have enough qualified meteorologists because 24 of its staff had gone abroad for better-paying jobs in recent years.

And just this week, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources announced that it had lost 83 geologists to overseas work over the past three years, hampering government programs for mapping earthquake threats and mineral resources.

A Department of Labor and Employment study in 2008 found that despite a huge domestic workforce, many positions for skilled workers were going unfilled because there were not enough qualified applicants.

Amid this shortfall, 22 percent of the roughly 330,000 Filipinos who went abroad to work last year were technical, managerial or clerical workers, according to official data.

The government has been seeking ways to upgrade salaries and benefits, according to Myrna Asuncion, assistant director of the government’s National Economic and Development Authority.

But local salaries can only go up by so much before they start hurting the competitiveness of local industries, Asuncion also told Agence France-Presse.

“We want to provide employment opportunities in the Philippines but there are some sectors that say salaries are already too high,” she said.

With no solution in sight, business groups hold little hope of keeping the nation’s top talent at home.

“You cannot stop these people from seeking greener pastures,” said Jesus Varela, a committee chairman with the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Midwife Chae Reviso returned to the Philippines after eight years working tax and rent-free in Saudi Arabia because she wanted to live again with her husband.

But barely a year later, the 39-year-old is preparing to leave again because her homeland offered her too few opportunities.

“I felt I owed my husband some time but I cannot afford to build a house on my salary in the Philippines,” Reviso said. –AFP

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