Jobless in Cordillera rising
>> Monday, November 19, 2012
EDITORIAL
The number of unemployed Cordillerans is rising, the National Statistics
Office and the labor department reported on the heels of the celebration of the
23rd National Statistics Month in Baguio.
The Department of Labor and Employment said an estimated 4.9 percent of
the Cordillera labor force is jobless this year, slightly higher than the
4.7-percent unemployed in 2011.
The number of the underemployed, who seek additional hours of work,
meanwhile, rose to 21.3 percent from only 13.5% in 2011.
NSO and DOLE define unemployment as a state when a person who is 15
years old and above is reported as “without work and/or seeking work”, while
underemployment includes employed persons who express the desire to have
additional hours of work in their present jobs or additional job or to have a
new jobs with longer working hours for additional pay.
The Social Protection and Development Report explains that unemployment
and underemployment are a factor in a higher poverty incidence.
Leading causes of unemployment and underemployment are contractual types
of employment, part time jobs and on the job training.
The SPDR also noted that poor families in the Cordillera rose in 2009.
This is the Cordillera alone. So why are government mouthpieces claiming the
country is on the verge to becoming a “tiger economy?”
According to the average man on the street, it is those in government
who maybe progressing with their increased perks and salaries while the masses
or those in the private sector are still hard up and trying to make both ends
meet.
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