Tag: labor force survey
Falling employment, rising underemployment confirm worsening joblessness
Hunyo 9, 2026
NEWS
The overall labor force picture is of an economy that is still not creating enough work.
BBM completes stagflationary hat trick: Soaring prices, worsening jobs, slowing growth
Mayo 7, 2026
ANALYSIS
The government cannot claim that it is addressing problems “directly and decisively” when families are forced to pay more for essentials as their livelihoods become even more insecure.
Headline figures mask crisis of informal, volatile labor—IBON
Mayo 6, 2026
The data underscore an economy without stable foundations. Agriculture and manufacturing are critical for broad-based and sustainable growth but continue to fluctuate and deteriorate, while services mainly absorb displaced workers in insecure and low-quality employment.
Highest joblessness since 2022 due to economy’s structural defects
Marso 15, 2026
The Marcos Jr administration needs to acknowledge and urgently address these problems, which cannot be reduced to last year’s corruption controversies and will only worsen as global oil shocks bear down in the coming months.
Job-destroying growth debunks stable labor market claims
Nobyembre 6, 2025
Recent job losses show how unstable the Philippine labor market remains, reflecting the weakness of the overall economy.
Gov’t claims of quality job expansion misleading amid worsening informality and rise in part-timers – IBON
Agosto 6, 2025
Fewer underemployed people is not an indication that the jobs situation is improving.
Falling employment, higher underemployment signs of unsolved PH jobs crisis-IBON
Mayo 8, 2025
The rise in underemployment reflects the unresolved jobs crisis where existing jobs pay poorly.
Govt’s labor market optimism disregards hardship of Filipino workers
Pebrero 7, 2025
The Marcos Jr administration’s optimism over the labor market shows it deliberately ignores Filipino workers’ reality.
Unemployment in Southeast Asia
Enero 16, 2025
The Philippines has the second highest unemployment rate in the region, despite the Marcos Jr administration’s hype of a “robust” labor market.