’Haunted hospitals’: House minority lawmakers seek probe into DOH’s HFEP

The liberal/social progressive bloc in the House of Representatives is seeking a congressional inquiry into the alleged misuse of funds allotted for the Department of Health’s (DOH) health facilities enhancement program (HFEP), which was earlier tagged by Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa himself as their agency’s equivalent of the flood control mess.

On Wednesday, Mamamayang Rep. Leila de Lima as well as the Akbayan bloc composed of Reps. Chel Diokno, Perci Cendana, Dadah Ismula and Dinagat Islands Rep. Arlene Bag-ao separately filed House Resolution No. 353 and HR No. 351 directing the committees on public accounts and health to probe the alleged mismanagement of the HFEP.

Diokno brought up this issue during the plenary deliberations for the DOH’s proposed P253-billion budget for 2026, where he discovered that only 200 out of 600 special health centers under the program were functional. He noted that Herbosa himself characterized the agency’s travails with HFEP as their ‘flood control version.’

For her part, De Lima likened it to ‘haunted hospitals-abandoned, incomplete, or nonoperational hospitals, health centers, and similar facilities.’

‘Picture this: There is funding for hospitals and health centers, but it is not completed or not completed on purpose; if there is, it is not operational and left to be abandoned. Who is it for – for ghosts?’ she said. Echoed Diokno: ‘This is a matter that needs to be looked into because the health of the Filipino people is at stake. Hundreds of billions of pesos have been allotted for this program, yet it has not delivered on its promise of accessible healthcare for our countrymen.’

During budget hearings, the DOH disclosed that a total of P400 billion had been released to local government units over the last 10 years under the HFEP.

Next year it is expected to get another P14.5 billion for the construction, rehabilitation, and upgrading of barangay health stations, rural health units, and other medical facilities in various areas across the country.

Senior appropriations vice chair and Bataan Rep. Albert Garcia clarified that the HFEP had no ghost health facilities but rather around 400 idle centers pending the deployment of doctors, nurses and midwives.

In her resolution, however, De Lima said the program was ‘replete with allegations of misuse of DOH funds on other infrastructure projects.’

She cited Sen. Pia Cayetano’s revelation during a Senate hearing that contractors linked with anomalous government projects – such as Legacy Construction, St. Timothy Construction and Royal Crown Monarch Construction – had been awarded contracts under the program but have yet to finish these centers or worse, abandoned them.

De Lima also cited another example in Northern Samar, where the provincial government and the DOH signed a 2017 agreement to build the P800-million New Samar Provincial Hospital.

However, the project stalled even after the release of P400 million. The Development Bank of the Philippines later approved a loan to continue construction, yet as of 2025, the hospital remains unfinished and in disrepair. These irregularities, the Akbayan resolution said, undermine the objectives of Republic Act No. 11223, otherwise known as the Universal Health Care Act, which guarantees equitable access to quality healthcare for all Filipinos.

Mondelez International champions ‘mindful snacking’ at key health forums

Mondelez International underscored its commitment to supporting its advocacy on mindful snacking during recent engagements with leading Philippine nutrition and health organizations.

Tang Sin Loon, Southeast Asia Lead for Nutrition Strategy and Communications of Mondelez International, shared insights on mindful snacking with stakeholders from the Philippine Society of Nutrition and Dietetics Convention 2025, and participants of the 31st Annual Convention of the Philippine Association for the Study of Overweight and Obesity, themed B.E.A.T. Obesity. Mondelez International also supported the recently held Philippine Association of Nutrition 78th anniversary and annual convention.

‘Filipinos love to snack,’ Tang highlighted, citing findings from Mondelez International’s 2024 State of Philippine Snacking report, which found that 98 percent of Filipinos enjoy at least one snack a day-well above the global average of 91 percent.

He explained that the role of snacking has evolved significantly over the years. Once seen primarily to fill hunger between meals, it is now also a source of nourishment, an energy boost, and enjoyment. This evolution has fueled consumer demand for snacks that are both convenient, offer functional nutrition and emotional uplift.

Mondelez International is the maker of such beloved snacks such as Oreo, Toblerone, Eden cheese and Cadbury Dairy Milk. ‘Snacks, when eaten in the right portion and consumed mindfully, can fit into a balanced lifestyle,’ Tang said. ‘Mindfulness is about being intentional and present in the moment as you eat, and research shows that mindful eating can help people find more satisfaction in food while consuming smaller amounts.’ Mindful snacking, as advocated by Mondelez International, focuses on four key areas: mindful eating, mindful portions, mindful recipes, and mindful choices. The company has expanded portion-control packs across its snacking portfolio, which refers to individually wrapped options and products sized at fewer than 200 calories. Clear labeling and easy-to-understand portion guidance on-pack and online also help consumers make more informed decisions.

At the same time, the company continues to enhance its recipes by gradually reducing health-sensitive nutrients, fortifying the snacks with positive nutrients, and offering a wide variety of options to suit different snacking moments. These efforts, Tang noted, align with the Philippine Plan of Action for Nutrition 2023-2028, which emphasizes social and behavioral change communication to address malnutrition. Scientific evidence further supports mindfulness as a tool for healthier eating. Clinical studies have shown that mindfulness interventions applied to eating help reduce binge-eating disorders, with benefits observed across both at-risk and healthy populations. The key principles of mindful eating include paying attention to the eating experience, recognizing hunger and satiety signals, savoring food with all the senses, and making conscious, deliberate food choices.

‘Snacking is a holistic experience that supports both physical and emotional needs,’ Tang said. ‘By empowering consumers with mindful snacking options and education, we aim to help people enjoy the snacks they love as part of a balanced lifestyle.’

Mondelez International continues to work with experts, stakeholders, and consumers to advance its mission of empowering people to snack right. By embedding mindfulness into its products, packaging, and consumer education, the company seeks to help Filipinos enjoy the snacks they love while living mindful, balanced lives.

Cyprus Department of Meteorology – Forecast for the Sea Area of Cyprus (A)

CYPRUS DEPARTMENT OF METEOROLOGY

FORECAST FOR THE SEA AREA OF CYPRUS (A)

FOR THE PERIOD FROM 0600 09/10/2025 UNTIL 0600 10/10/2025

Area covered is 8 kilometers seawards.

Winds are in BEAUFORT scale. Times are local times.

Atmospheric pressure at the time of issue: 1013hPa (hectopascal)

Low pressure is affecting the area. The weather will be partly cloudy and at times mainly cloudy with local showers, while isolated thunderstorms are also expected mainly over the western and northern coasts and later over the eastern/southeastern coastal areas. IN STORM THE WIND MAY BE VARIABLE STRENGTHENING. All phenomena are ceasing, since late afternoon.

Visibility: Good, but moderate to poor in showers

Sea surface temperature: 26°C

Warnings: NIL

Reforms spur competition in PHL energy sector

AFTER nine energy secretaries and six energy regulatory chiefs over the last two decades, the country’s power sector underwent transformative changes, many of which were anchored on major policy reforms.

In brief, EPIRA divided the power industry into four distinct sectors: generation, transmission, distribution, and supply. This opened the sector to private developers, encouraged competition, and enabled much-needed investments in new power projects.

‘EPIRA initiated the restructuring of the electric power industry and the privatization of government interests in the generation and transmission sectors.

The primary objective of these reforms was to foster competition within the generation and supply sectors while enhancing regulatory oversight in the transmission and distribution sectors,’ said ERC Chairman Francis Saturnino Juan.

The RE law, meanwhile, laid the foundation for the clean energy transition. It created a framework of incentives that encouraged private generators to invest in RE. This law, combined with the growing demand for cleaner power, has accelerated the entry of renewable technologies into the energy mix.

In 2024, 794 megawatts (MW) of new renewable capacity were installed. This exceeds the combined total of the previous three years. Today, renewables account for more than 20 percent of installed capacity, and this share continues to grow.

‘Over the past two decades, the Philippine energy sector has taken big strides – EPIRA opened the market, while the Renewable Energy Act enabled clean energy to gain ground,’ commented ACEN Corp. President Eric Francia.

More importantly, the RE law is a move to reduce reliance on imported fuels, a move towards energy transition, Developers of Renewable Energy for AdvancedMent, Inc. (DREAM) President Jay Layug pointed out.

AS trading platform

Aside from EPIRA and the RE law, Meralco PowerGen Corp. (MGen), the power generation arm of Meralco, cited another important development- the launch of the reserve market (RM). This is a trading platform for ancillary services (AS) or power reserves to secure the grid’s stability and reliability.

All of these reforms brought undeniable improvements. ‘They expanded private sector participation, increased generation capacity, and introduced more competitive dynamics,’ said MGen President Emmanuel Rubio.

According to the Department of Energy (DOE), these milestones highlight the progress in advancing market operations in the power sector.

‘The continuous development of WESM and the RM is building a more efficient, competitive, and responsive electricity market, ensuring improved reliability, better price signals, and stronger resource sharing across the country,’ it said.

As of July 2025, the DOE reported that the country’s total installed capacity reached 31,701MW, with a total dependable capacity of 27,812MW. It also recorded 16,783MW from committed power projects and 109,336MW from indicative power projects.

Upgrading the transmission network

IN 2020, a bold policy move from the DOE was the moratorium on new coal power projects. To achieve the 35-percent RE share in the energy mix by 2030 and 50 percent by 2040, the agency had to impose this to transition the country’s power supply away from fossil fuels, aligning with global climate goals.

Likewise, as of July 2025, coal-fired power plants contribute 13,000MW or 41 percent of the country’s total capacity.

The DOE is also the driving force behind another major milestone-the inclusion of nuclear energy in the mix. Recently, the Philippine Atomic Energy Regulatory Authority (PhilATOM) was established, which likewise led to the country’s election to the International Atomic Energy Agency Board. These developments put the country a step closer to realizing its target of 4,800MW of nuclear energy through 2040.

Other developments cited by the ERC over the past 20 years include the awarding of a transmission concessionaire to the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP); rate unbundling of distribution utilities (DUs); removal of inter-class subsidies the distribution utilities’ rates; commercial operations of WESM; ERC adoption of Performance-Based Regulation (PBR) for setting the DUs’ rates; introduction of open access and retail competition (RCOA); and implementation of competitive selection process (CSP), among others.

Transmission challenge

When NGCP took over transmission operations in 2009, it was faced with the monumental task of operating, upgrading, and expanding the country’s aging power transmission network.

In just 16 years, NGCP upgraded critical high-voltage transmission lines and substations, resulting in a 167% increase in power delivery capacity, 100% connection of all new power plants, and an 88% increase in generation capacity.

‘Because of NGCP’s drive to strengthen the grid, the company was able to decrease power outages by 84.57 percent, greatly improving the stability and reliability of power delivery across the country,’ it said.

of NGCP’s most notable achievements include the completion of the Mindanao-Visayas Interconnection, which connected the power grids of all three major island groups; the Mariveles-Hermosa-San Jose 500kV transmission line, which further strengthened the reliability of the Luzon power grid; the Cebu-Negros-Panay 230kV backbone, which helped stabilize the power situation in Western and Central Visayas; and the Cebu-Bohol Interconnection, which enabled the transfer of power between the two islands.

With 99 completed projects and a P395-billion investment in the grid, NGCP provided more efficient and reliable transmission services while lowering the company’s part in the electricity bill at just 3.72 percent compared to the 50.1 percent generation charges and 20.67 percent distribution charges.

‘NGCP was able to provide better services and lowered rates-an effective and positive outcome of one of the country’s biggest public-private partnership initiatives,’ the Sy-led firm said.

WESM, RCOA

Notable to the DU’s operations are the establishment of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) in Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao where electricity prices are driven by supply and demand, as well as the implementation of RCOA which later on formed part of the bigger Competitive Retail Electricity Market (CREM) which now includes the Retail Aggregation Program (RAP) that empowers consumers to choose their own electricity suppliers.

These are among the major transformations that continue to define how Meralco serves its more than eight million customers.

‘This really changed the landscape because it placed consumers at the center and pushed utilities like Meralco to innovate and provide better and more flexible offerings while still ensuring that we live up to our mandate to deliver stable, reliable, and cost-competitive power,’ said Meralco executive vice president and chief operating officer Ronnie Aperocho.

Over the years, the DOE introduced new policies that made the RE law successful by incentivizing RE developers and mandating the use of renewables. ‘We’ve also seen growing interest from households and businesses in solar energy, which Meralco supports through the Net Metering Program,’ which allows customers to install rooftop solar and offset their electricity consumption, Aperocho said.

Through the Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS), DUs like Meralco are now required to source an increasing portion of their supply from renewables.

Green Energy Auction

Additionally, the Green Energy Option Program (GEOP) has allowed consumers to source their power directly from renewable energy suppliers. Meanwhile, the Green Energy Auction Program (GEAP) has driven even more investment into renewables by providing a market that caters to qualified technologies.

‘In terms of outcomes, many of these reforms and policies have been positive. Competition and market reforms have led to greater transparency, customer choice, and challenged distribution utilities to ensure service quality and efficiency,’ Aperocho added.

With the ongoing transition from centralized to decentralized systems and from captive to contestable customers, Aboitiz Power Corp. has likewise grown in the retail electricity space. By far, it has the highest market share based on demand at 27.27 percent of the total as per the latest ERC data.

The energy sector has indeed made big strides, but with more RE, there is a need for more transmission capacity, AboitizPower noted. The increase in variability also necessitates battery storage systems and reinforces the importance of baseload and flexible generation capacities.

‘Moreover, with the advancement of solar PV, the issue of its footprint on agricultural land has increasingly become more pronounced. With the energy transition in process, the energy sector workforce would also need a more diverse set of talents who can competently meet its evolving demands,’ it said.

Impediments

WHILE renewables are scaling up, ACEN agreed that the challenges in grid stability highlight the urgent need for greater investment in storage and transmission. ‘The next decade holds much promise as the industry accelerates the energy transition and opens the market to broader competition,’ added Francia.

The Independent Power Producers Association (PIPPA) raised similar concerns. ‘There are also operational challenges such as managing constraints for energy storage systems and implementing market interventions when necessary, such as the secondary price cap,’ said PIPPA President Anne Montelibano.

While the price caps are perceived to protect consumers from high WESM prices in the short term, they act as a deterrent for additional investments in generation capacity in the long term. The price caps are not reflective of market conditions that put further pressure on prices in relation to the limited supply.

As structural and market reforms were introduced over the years, consumers still find it hard to feel significant savings.

Consumer group Power for People (P4P) continues to protest the DU’s high electricity rates, which have increased by P3 per kilowatt hour for the past three years. ‘That’s an additional P26 million that consumers are pouring into its coffers every single month today,’ said Gerry Arances, Convenor of the Power for People Coalition.

The group also said there was ‘neglect’ on the ERC’s part for failing to act on the DU’s rate reset for many years.

The ERC chief explained that despite all efforts, his office is still subject to both criticism and commendation. ‘With generation capacity occasionally in short supply, recurring blackouts across the country, and persistently rising electricity prices, despite the restructuring, privatization, and liberalization of the power industry and more than a decade since the ERC’s RCOA declaration, substantial work remains to be done.’

Night owls in a sunrise industry: The hidden costs of the business process outsourcing boom

IN the early 2000s, the promise of the business process outsourcing (BPO) sector was simple: Filipinos could earn more without having the need to work in another country.

Companies based in the United States and the United Kingdom started moving their customer support and back-office operations to Manila, where English-speaking workers filled cubicles running on foreign time zones.

It was a different kind of overseas work. The contracts were offshore, but the workers stayed home. Soon, the model scaled fast.

By the mid-2000s, the Philippines was already emerging as one of the world’s call center capitals. What began as a handful of firms handling customer support for foreign clients had turned into a fast-growing industry that was reshaping the economy.

A 2006 study by the Philippine Institute for Development Studies noted that as early as 2004, the country had captured about 20 percent of the global market share in contact center services-a foothold that would later define its position in the global service economy.

The dominance is also reflected in its earnings, with its revenues climbing from $350 million in 2001 to $1.65 billion in 2004. According to the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the BPO sector accounted for just 0.075 percent of GDP in 2000, but its share had already expanded to 2.4 percent by 2005.

The industry was also generating jobs at a pace the government had never seen. The Arroyo government said that only 4,000 workers were employed in BPO in 2001. By the end of 2005, the figure soared to 163,000.

By then, the rewards were clear. Data from the BPO Industry Employees Network (BIEN) showed that average entry-level pay in 2005 ranged from P28,000 to P32,000-nearly triple the average salary of other private sector workers at the time.

The industry’s promise of higher pay and professional workspaces drew thousands of young Filipinos from all backgrounds, turning night shifts into symbols of upward mobility.

However, University of the Philippines-Diliman labor economist Virgel C. Binghay believes that the wage premium that fueled the industry’s rise has also exposed its limits.

‘The wage premium does create real mobility, but it is uneven and fragile. What we may be seeing is not sustainable upward mobility across generations, but more of a ‘holding pattern,’ Binghay told BusinessMirror.

‘Higher wages merely cover up systemic weaknesses: limited upgrading, inadequate labor protections, and the absence of equally attractive alternatives outside BPOs.’

The boom, Binghay said, was both a success story and a warning. The kind of growth that looked stable on paper but fragile up close.

Major shifts

AMONG those drawn to that promise was Alwyn, 47, not his real name, an accountancy graduate who turned to the night shift when the pay from his first jobs could no longer keep up with the needs of home.

‘The pay was low-around P7,000 a month. A friend introduced me to the call center and said the pay was higher. That was really the primary concern: higher pay. More than double, actually about 2.5 times, so I shifted from a normal organization to a night shift work,’ he recalled.

For Alwyn, it was about getting by. The promise of a stable income and a little more room to breathe was enough to leave behind the daylight routine he’d grown used to.

He joined the industry in 2002, when call centers were only starting to fill newly built towers in Ortigas and Makati. The city’s skyline was changing, and so were the rhythms of work.

‘It was really a boom. There was a premium on top of the salary, aside from the night differential. and even the break was paid.’

Back then, the graveyard shift meant something else entirely-a thin corridor of people who kept the night running: security guards pacing under shuttered establishment lights, clerks behind the counters of 24-hour stores, and sex workers trying to make a living in the streets.

But around the 2000s, the night belonged to others, too. To people like Alwyn, who learned to stay awake for a living, chasing quotas and foreign voices past midnight.

‘It’s hard at first . you have to sleep during the day, but sometimes you can’t fall asleep right away because you end up checking your phone or finding things to do,’ he said.

His shifts often ended when the sun was already up, forcing him to darken his room and block out the noise to get enough rest.

Weekends, too, became shorter. His body would still be catching up from the week’s night shifts, so Saturdays often disappeared into sleep.

By the time he felt rested enough to go out or see his family, Sunday had already arrived-and by nightfall, it was time to start another workweek.

For BPO workers, those adjustments were part of the deal. It was the hidden cost of the higher pay and the steady job that kept them home while the rest of the country slept.

Concerns

MANY say that working in the BPO industry requires a different kind of endurance-one that tests not just your English-speaking skills, but also the body’s limits.

For Alwyn, the price of that endurance became harder to ignore. Just eight years after he started working in BPO, he was already diagnosed with hypertension. The long hours, endless coffee, and constant pressure had begun to exhaust him.

‘Aside from that, your biological clock changes,’ he said. ‘Sometimes you end up sleeping in the office, and your rest isn’t a full eight hours. Either you drink coffee or make up for it with food.’

Over time, eating became both a comfort and a coping mechanism. Food runs and coffee deliveries became part of the rhythm of survival-a small relief amid the exhaustion of serving clients from another time zone.

‘It’s the easiest way to cope. That’s what managers and bosses use as an incentive, too, to keep us motivated,’ he admitted.

The experience of workers like Alwyn mirrors what global studies have long documented. A 2010 book by the International Labour Organization (ILO), titled Offshoring and Working Conditions in Remote Work, found that nearly half-or 42.6 percent-of Filipino call center agents work at night, a schedule ‘associated with occupational safety and health concerns.’

The report also linked the job to sleep disorders, fatigue, eye strain, neck, shoulder, and back pain, and even voice problems.

Beyond the physical toll, the ILO study warned of psychological strain among workers who operate under constant surveillance.

BPO employees, it noted, often face heavy workloads, rigid procedures, and electronic monitoring-conditions that limit their autonomy and create high levels of work-related stress.

That kind of pressure was familiar to Erwin Alcober, now 47, who entered the industry in 2007.

By then, he already had a young family to feed and a child about to start school.

His job at a small internet café barely paid minimum wage-just enough to keep the lights on.

‘My wife and I already had two kids by then,’ he said. ‘She actually sent my résumé to a call center without telling me . that was the best source of income at the time.’

Without a college diploma, his options were limited. But call centers were hiring people who could speak English and learn quickly.

For Erwin, the P21,000 salary was more than just a pay raise-it was stability, something his family never had before.

Still, that stability came at a cost. ‘Targets kept changing. Average handling time used to be 20 minutes, then they’d bring it down to 15. It became toxic.’

Average handling time (AHT) is one of the key performance metrics in the BPO industry. It measures how fast an agent resolves customer concerns, often down to the last second.

Every call, pause, and note entry is tracked by software. The shorter the time, the better the score.

But for workers like Erwin, every second saved on a call came at the expense of rest and health. A trade-off is built into the system itself.

The sleepless nights piled up, and so did the stress. After two years, he, too, developed hypertension.

‘The stress is different.. If you don’t meet the metrics [in AHT], they’ll coach you. The whole process wears you down,’ Erwin added.

Struggles

FOR Lean Porquia, founder of BIEN, the struggles of BPO workers also reveal a deeper neglect in workplace health and safety.

‘One of the leading illnesses among call center workers is urinary tract infection.. That’s because restroom breaks are controlled and regulated to some extent.. Breaks are plotted based on the volume of incoming calls. If there’s a high call volume, you’re not allowed to take a break,’ he explained to BusinessMirror.

Porquia said the system has made workers so tightly monitored that even basic bodily needs are treated as a matter of productivity. The result, he added, is a workforce that continues to deliver under conditions most people wouldn’t consider humane.

Porquia recalled that at the height of the pandemic, even visibly sick agents were told not to go home.

‘There was a time when an agent was already complaining about not feeling well. The team leader told the agent, ‘Don’t go home, just sleep here,” he said. ‘Later, the agent suddenly collapsed and, unfortunately, died. The company covered it up.’

Health hazards, he added, extend beyond infection control.

‘It’s very common in call centers to share headsets,’ he said. ‘Whatever headset was used by the previous agent, that’s the same one you’ll use. So, what if that person had pneumonia or tuberculosis? You’ll end up getting their illness too.’

He said these problems persist because the industry’s occupational safety and health system remains largely self-regulated, with companies given leeway to stage-manage compliance.

Under the current framework of the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (Peza), companies operating inside ecozones-including many BPO firms-enjoy wide administrative autonomy. Porquia said this setup has made labor inspections ‘limited and largely procedural,’ instead of random and independent.

The result, he added, is an illusion of compliance where workers appear protected on paper, but continue to face unsafe and unhealthy conditions in practice.

Fragile climb

THE personal anecdotes of BPO workers echo a deeper pattern in what was once called a sunrise industry.

Binghay explained that while the BPO sector still offers relatively higher wages, its early advantage has faded over time.

‘BPO wages are still competitive relative to the wider Philippine labor market, but the advantage has weakened significantly,’ he said. ‘What was once a strong draw is now a thinner cushion, and unless reinforced by better job quality, stronger protections, and career pathways, the sector risks losing its attractiveness to the next generation of workers.’

Data from BIEN showed that as employment in the sector grew, entry-level pay steadily declined.

From an average of P28,000 to P32,000 in 2005, starting salaries dropped to P18,000 to P30,000 by 2010, and further to P15,000 to P30,000 in 2015.

By 2020, new hires were earning between P13,000 and P28,000-a roughly 32 percent decrease over 15 years, even if record employment and export revenues were achieved by the industry.

Binghay said this drop shows that wages are no longer the main reason Filipinos choose or remain in BPO jobs. The post-pandemic landscape, he added, has also reshaped worker motivations.

‘Post-pandemic and amid rapid tech change, workers are also seeking security, wellbeing, purpose, and digital empowerment-things that sometimes weigh even more when it comes to retention,’ he said.

Binghay also cautioned that the industry’s current model remains ‘fragile’ unless it adapts to the changing needs of its workforce.

Higher wages, he said, can only go so far when health risks and job insecurity persist.

‘The gaps lie in the lack of sector-specific [occupational safety and health] standards, very rigid scheduling, inadequate preventive care, weak enforcement, and limited worker voice. Unless these are addressed, the industry risks trading short-term wage gains for pangmatagalang [long-term] worker health costs-a cycle that undermines both productivity and retention.’

The sharp decline in starting pay, according to Porquia, also reflects how the Philippines is slowly losing its cost advantage to emerging competitors.

He explained that as technology advances, what once set Filipino BPO workers apart-especially their ability to speak with a clear, neutral accent-no longer guarantees an edge in the global market.

Porquia pointed to a new software called Sanas, which can neutralize a person’s accent in real time.

‘So, if you have someone with a very pronounced, strong accent, like many Indians, it can modify that so that when you hear them on the other end of the line, it sounds like you’re talking to an American with a natural, neutral accent. That will change the market because of that,’ he said.

‘Right now, India dominates the non-voice sector. With this technology, they can take over voice accounts, too. And when that happens, foreign investors may start to pressure Philippine companies to lower wages even further to stay competitive.’

Impact of automation

EVEN before technologies like Sanas entered the market, BPO workers had already begun to feel the pressure of automation.

A 2016 study by the ILO found that nearly 89 percent of Filipino workers in the outsourcing sector were at risk of automation.

The report presented the danger stemmed largely from ‘software automation,’ in which algorithms perform routine and repetitive tasks such as data entry, ticket processing, and customer response routing-functions that make up the bulk of call center and back-office work.

The ILO warned that unless the sector diversified into higher-value services, technology would eventually erode its labor advantage.

Almost a decade later, that early warning has become more urgent.

A 2025 working paper by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) identified the Philippine BPO industry as among the most at risk from artificial intelligence (AI).

The IMF said the industry’s focus on routine, rule-based roles-such as handling customer calls and processing transactions-makes it especially vulnerable to large-scale disruptions.

Overall, the IMF study found that about one-third of all jobs in the Philippines are highly exposed to AI.

Of these, 61 percent are in occupations where AI could complement human work by improving productivity. Meanwhile, 14 percent of the total workforce holds low-complementarity jobs that are far more likely to be displaced.

Among those highly exposed with low complementarity are customer service representatives, telemarketers, accountants, auditors, and administrative clerks-many of whom make up the country’s BPO workforce.

In contrast, roles such as managers, teachers, lawyers, and engineers fall under high exposure but high complementarity, where AI can enhance, but not replace, human judgment.

For Binghay, these findings underscore an urgent need for foresight.

‘Yes, there is a real risk of displacement. But that doesn’t mean job loss is inevitable. With retraining, just-transition policies, and a shift toward higher-value services, the BPO industry can evolve rather than collapse under AI pressure,’ he said.

Jun M. Roy, chairman of the Philippine Society for Talent Development (PSTD), agreed that AI will change how work is done-but not what makes workers indispensable.

‘I don’t think empathy in terms of answering or responding to calls can be replaced; the friendliness, I don’t think it can be substituted by AI.That’s something unique, uniquely human, that still cannot be copied by an AI,’ he told BusinessMirror.

Beyond empathy, he stressed that leadership remains the strongest defense against automation.

‘Leadership skills are very much essential and critical. You don’t look at AI leading a team of humans. Wisdom is also still needed,’ Roy said.

In 2024, the IT and Business Process Association of the Philippines (IBPAP) reported the sector closed the year with 1.82 million jobs and $38 billion in revenue.

IBPAP expects the sector to sustain its growth trajectory, projecting its workforce to reach 2.5 million and revenues to expand to $59 billion by 2028.

Closing the gap

WHILE new technology threatens to upend the industry, Asian Institute of Management economist Jamil Paolo S. Francisco said the deeper challenge lies in human capital.

The long-term competitiveness of the BPO sector, he explained, depends not only on keeping pace with technology but also on improving what he called the country’s ‘human capital infrastructure.’

‘Even more important than physical infrastructure is the human capital infrastructure, the education,’ Francisco said. ‘And that is really the only way we can ensure that our IT-BPO sector will be competitive in the future, and also how we can achieve prosperity.’

He said that although the outsourcing sector continues to fuel growth, the benefits remain concentrated in major cities where education and digital resources are stronger.

Outside Metro Manila, Cebu, and Davao, workers face fewer opportunities to enter or move up in the industry.

‘If there’s no development outside that IT-BPO sector, how can we have the shared prosperity and trickle-down effect that we’re talking about? So, it all boils down again to education,’ Francisco said.

That uneven access, said University of the Philippines Diliman visiting professor and economist Maria Reinaruth D. Carlos, also reveals a deeper kind of skills mismatch.

‘Evidently, there is de-skilling. You study other courses-say, nursing-and then end up working in a call center or the BPO industry,’ Carlos said.

She noted that while the industry has absorbed many college graduates, it has also created a cycle where workers are overqualified for entry-level positions yet face few chances for advancement.

‘With that kind of work, there’s no real career progression. that’s the problem,’ Carlos said.

Francisco added that unless the Philippines strengthens its human capital base, even this form of employment may become less secure.

The stagnation in education quality, he warned, is already eroding the very advantage that once defined Filipino labor.

He emphasized that reforms must be systemic-stretching from basic education to specialized, technical, and managerial training that can prepare Filipinos for a digital economy.

‘We need one big push. from basic to specialized, vocational, technical training, to managerial skills.’

CDB crush defending champions Fairfirst Insurance in MCA Super Premier League

The lone batting effort by opening batter Sangeeth Cooray (62 off 52 balls, 2 sixes, 5 fours) and the splendid spell of leg spin bowling by Sanoj Dharshaka (4 overs, 19 runs, 4 wickets) gave Maliban Biscuits a fighting 14-run win over BBK Partnership, in the ongoing 32nd Singer-MCA Super Premier League T20 Tournament 2025, which continued yesterday at the MCA Grounds.

Earlier yesterday, CDB crushed defending champions Fairfirst Insurance by five wickets; Fairfirst Insurance, trapped on a turning wicket, crashed to a paltry 93 runs in 13.5 overs, having no answer to CDB bowlers Promod Madushan, Tharindu Ratnayake, and Navindu Prabath.

The tournament will continue tomorrow and Sunday, 12 October, with the three remaining matches in the League stage.

Chief scores:

CDB beat Fairfirst Insurance by 5 wickets.

Fairfirst Insurance 93 (13.5) (Kamil Mishara 15, Moditha Ranatunga 33, Sohan de Livera 18, Promod Madushan 2/16, Tharindu Ratnayake 3/23, Navindu Prabath 3/15)

CDB 93-5 (13) (Shevon Daniel 45, Avishka Fernando 20, Dilum Sudeera 2/28, Thanuka Dabare 2/19)

Maliban Biscuits beat BBK Partnership by 14 runs.

Maliban Biscuits 118 (19.4) (Sangeeth Cooray 62, Ranjith Kumar Newton 2/16, Tony Breig 2/16, K. Shayamasunder 3/19, V. Viyaskanth 2/19)

BBK Partnership 104 (18.2) (Santhush Gunatillake 21, V. Viyaskanth 34, Dushan Hemantha 2/15, Sanoj Dharshaka 4/19)

Certified program to empower public sector officers to build globally recognised brands

The National Enterprise Development Authority (NEDA), in collaboration with the Sri Lanka Institute of Marketing (SLIM), has officially launched the Certified Brand Analyst Program 2025.

The program, a joint effort with the Industry and Entrepreneurship Development Ministry, is designed to enhance the skills of Enterprise Development Officers (EDOs), enabling them to guide small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in creating globally recognised brands. The initiative’s goal is to foster a new generation of brand creators within the Government.

Industry and Entrepreneurship Development Ministry Secretary Thilaka Jayasundara introduced the strategic concept of ‘branding the Industry Family.’ She emphasised that all key partners and entities under the ministry’s umbrella must work together, asserting that a unified vision and a collective effort are crucial for success, as no organisation can reach its full potential alone.

Using ‘Clean Sri Lanka’ as a national initiative, Jayasundara stated that its primary objective goes beyond merely cleaning streets; it’s about cleansing the mind-sets of the Sri Lankan people. She detailed the initiative’s three pillars as economic, social, and environmental. She emphasised that a clean environment is a direct result of building a strong economy and social structure.

She explained these pillars, support several key national targets set for 2030, all focused on building a manufacturing-led economy. Jayasundara said the first goal is to boost the manufacturing sector’s contribution to GDP from its current 16.2% to 20% by 2030. She said it is essential for reaching the broader national target of increasing the country’s overall GDP from 26.7% to 28% by 2030, which would pave the way for a ‘rich country and a beautiful life for all’ by 2028.

She shared the second goal as boosting entrepreneurship. Jayasundara noted that only 3.2% of the national labour force are entrepreneurs. To increase this contribution to at least 10% by 2030 is a challenging but necessary task. To ensure stability, she also outlined a series of ambitious financial targets. The ministry is aiming for a foreign income of $ 15 billion and a total import and export income of $ 28 billion by 2028, with a further national target of $ 36 billion by 2030. A failure to meet these goals, she warned could lead to economic instability due to the country’s debt obligations.

Jayasundara also highlighted the remarkable resilience of Sri Lanka’s apparel sector. She noted that despite global trade challenges, total exports for the first seven months of 2025 reached an impressive $ 9,992.53 million, marking a robust 7.79% growth over the previous year. To sustain this drive, she urged the industry to proactively identify and target new global markets, specifically pointing to South Africa and the Gulf countries as untapped and massive opportunities.

She outlined that a key objective of the ministry is to develop high-potential, export-led industries, diversifying the export basket, and increasing the number of export countries. Addressing the motivation behind the new specialised initiative, Jayasundara explained that the ultimate goal is to create a powerful export brand for Sri Lanka. She assured that the new program will enhance the quality of officers and that the ministry plans to introduce a KPI-based incentive system to drive results.

Jayasundara then outlined three crucial elements for this initiative: ‘Brand,’ ‘Certificate,’ and ‘Communication.’ She argued that both entrepreneurs and public officers must build their own personal brands to be effective; the certificate is designed to enhance the quality of participants and provide a formal qualification; and communication is vital for an initiative to succeed.

She also spoke of a long-term vision to unify the industry by merging NEDA, SED, and IDB, a plan first conceived in 2016. She expressed her belief that the SLIM institute would eventually join this collaborative framework, suggesting that these partnerships are essential for creating a national industrial brand.

SLIM President Prof. Dewasiri N. Jayantha then reflected on Sri Lanka’s economic history, noting that the country once had its own global brands, citing the Upali Group and its ventures as prime examples. He argued that a shift from an export-oriented model to import-driven consumption led to the significant depreciation of the Sri Lankan rupee and consistently negative balance of trade, which he identified as the beginning of the nation’s economic challenges.

He asserted that the 2022 national crisis finally ‘opened the eyes’ of the Government and private sector to the failure of this economic model. Despite being a 55-year-old institution, he acknowledge that SLIM couldn’t fully achieve its vision ‘to drive the nation towards economic prosperity.’ To rectify this, the organisation has identified entrepreneurship and the development of SMEs as its core pillars and has decided to invest heavily in a multi-tiered series of programs, with an initial estimate of 300 million Sri Lankan rupees to train 1,800 individuals. He clarified that this is not a profit-based venture for SLIM, but a fulfilment of its social and institutional responsibility.

He detailed the new training program, designed to create a ‘supportive arm’ of skilled professionals. The program starts with the Relationship Officers (RO) Program, training 700 individuals, 500 of whom will become Relationship Specialists. The Brand Analyst Program, a 10-week program, will train 100 individuals. From there, the top 50 will advance to become Certified Brand Strategists, and finally, a Business Consultant Program will train 350 individuals with the goal of creating 100 professional Business Consultants who could potentially earn in ‘millions.’ He also revealed that SLIM is in discussions to link this program to with the Chartered Management Institute located in UK with their Level 7 program, which would provide a globally recognised qualification.

He laid out the Brand Analyst Program curriculum in detail, first to third week: Introduction to branding, differentiating it from products, understanding its importance for SMEs, and focusing on brand elements, identity, and target audience. Fourth to seventh week: Strategic topics like brand positioning, developing a unique selling proposition (USP), and mastering brand storytelling and communication. Eighth to ninth week: Practical lessons on branding tools and techniques for local and export markets, including learning from mistakes and focusing on reputation management. Tenth week: The final ‘brand camp,’ which includes a practical simulation activity: the digital re-launch of a brand.

In addition to the educational content, the program offers a scholarship fund for the top ten performers, a Vietnam tour for the top student, and a compensation or bonus system for participants who achieve their KPIs.

He expressed gratitude for the Australian High Commission’s Sri Lanka Support Division, which will partially fund the program, noting that its outcome-based nature was highly compelling. He reaffirmed that SLIM’s motivation is not profit-driven but rooted in a sense of national responsibility.

He said the ultimate objective is to create 20 to 30 new global brands from Sri Lanka within the next two years, a significant increase from the current ‘less than a handful.’ He thanked all partners for enabling SLIM to be a key participant in this vital national journey.

Supreme Court to hear Shani Abeysekara’s petitions over 2021 arrest

The Supreme Court yesterday granted leave to proceed with three Fundamental Rights petitions filed by former Criminal Investigation Department (CID) Director Shani Abeysekara and two former CID officers, challenging their arrest by the Colombo Crime Division (CCD) in August 2021.

Abeysekara, along with former CID officers Sugath Mendis and Nawarathne Premarathne, was arrested over allegations of fabricating evidence in the case against former Deputy Inspector General (DIG) Vass Gunawardena.

The petitions claim the arrests were politically motivated and followed an allegedly fabricated case connected to a weapons cache uncovered seven years after the 2013 murder of Mohamed Shyam.

The bench comprising Justices Mahinda Samayawardena, Priyantha Fernando, and Sobitha Rajakaruna granted leave to proceed with all three petitions and scheduled the case for argument on 14 May 2026.

Counsel Shantha Jayawardena, Shehan De Silva, and Hafeel Farisz appeared for the Petitioners, while Sanjeewa Wijewickrema represented former Inspector General of Police (IGP) Deshabandu Thennakoon and Neville De Silva. State Counsel Sajith Bandara appeared on behalf of the Attorney General.

Adopted without a vote in Geneva: Inept at the international

The latest Human Rights Council Resolution on Sri Lanka (60/L-1/Rev-1) was adopted without a vote in Geneva on the 6th of October 2025, despite Sri Lanka’s strongly stated rejection of it. What happened there and why was it adopted ‘without a vote’?

At its simplest, it was adopted that way because a call for a vote on the resolution was consciously passed up by Sri Lanka, which could have requested a member state such as China, to call for it.

Immediately after Sri Lanka’s Permanent Representatives at the UN in Geneva, Himali Arunatilleka’s speech rejecting the Resolution, the Chair of the UNHRC asked the Council if anybody would like to call for a vote on the Resolution, since there was clearly a difference of opinion on it, including those of China and Cuba which had disassociated themselves from what was seemingly a consensus on the Resolution earlier.

Despite the rejection of the resolution by Sri Lanka, there was deadly silence in the Council. The Chair then gavelled it through as adopted without a vote, indicating no serious objections by any country to its formal adoption. Clearly, Sri Lanka had not arranged for a friendly member country to call for a vote on its behalf.

This decision not to call for a vote, deliberately taken by Sri Lanka, presumably had some logic. One was articulated on TV the next day by a government representative, who explained that there was nothing the UNHRC could do to us, so we didn’t bother with a vote. Could the government then explain why the Foreign Minister, who didn’t go to some important international summits such as the BRICS and SCO, actually made the effort to fly to Geneva and speak there on this Resolution?

There could be far more credible reasons for this decision than this possible cover-up. The last time Sri Lanka called for a vote on the OSLAP at the UNHRC in 2022, it got 7 votes, and the mechanism of the Accountability Project was actually strengthened and extended through the Resolution it lost.

Was the government worried that it may not gather even that number of votes (which was the lowest thus far) in favour of the country and thereby expose to Sri Lankan citizens, its lack of skills in building global support for its position at international forums?

Or was the Govt not serious about challenging the legitimacy of the Accountability Project and the ‘rejection’ was simply throwing a bone to Sri Lankans anxious back home, an eyewash for public consumption, a show of bravado, which they never meant to follow through?

Slapping the OSLAP

Ambassador/Permanent Representative Himali Karunatilleka’s statement was clear. She said that Sri Lanka had fundamental objections to the Resolution due its reference to the Office of the Sri Lanka Accountability Project (OSLAP) set up within the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), the mandate of which had been extended in 2022 via subsequent Resolutions, and further extended this time in October 2025.

She explained to the Council that the issue was with ‘the external evidence gathering mechanism on Sri Lanka within the OHCHR, which, in our view is an unprecedented and ad hoc expansion of the Council´s mandate.’ She further stated that Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath had ‘reiterated that Sri Lanka does not accept the external evidence gathering mechanism set up by the OHCHR.’

This mechanism set up in 2021 and strengthened and extended in 2022 according to the OHCHR website, and was established ‘to strengthen the capacity of the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) ‘to collect, consolidate, analyse and preserve information and evidence and to develop possible strategies for future accountability processes for gross violations of human rights or serious violations of international humanitarian law in Sri Lanka, to advocate for victims and survivors, and to support relevant judicial and other proceedings, including in Member States, with competent jurisdiction”.

This alludes to Universal Jurisdiction, which means that unlike in the case of the International Criminal Court, one’s country (in this case, Sri Lanka) doesn’t have to have signed up to the Rome Statute to be prosecuted for such crimes in another country which decides to take up the case for prosecution in their own jurisdiction.

What could be done?

Since the current government objects to this prospect, what options were available in order to achieve a favourable outcome for Sri Lanka? It had an entire year to think about this and to exercise at least one option freely available to it, since this mechanism already existed for a few years.

Since Sri Lanka declared that the new mechanism was an ‘unprecedented and ad hoc expansion of the Council´s mandate’, setting out a generic criticism of the Office of the High Commissioner for exceeding the mandate, it would have been the logical thing to do to as a member of the United Nations, to convince as many members of the Council as possible of the dangers of such a precedence and the implications of it for all countries, and to convince them to oppose it for their collective benefit and of the UN system.

Since our diplomats are stationed in Geneva permanently, did the government instruct them to pursue this option? These efforts take time. Or did the government, including the Foreign Minister, simply pay lip service to these objections only at the very last session?

Did the Foreign Minister take this up with member countries of the Council when he visited Geneva in September? Did he take it up with his counterparts in other countries when he attended the High-Level Segment of the Human Rights Council in February/March 2025, with Ministers, Heads of State and other High Officials attending the sessions? Did Sri Lanka make a concerted effort to remove what they find so objectionable, from being further extended? Or were Foreign Minister Herath and the government unaware that this was a course of action available to them?

What does it say about the efficacy of their diplomacy as they opted to watch helplessly, unable to gather a minimum number of states to support them in their objections and rejection?

What really happened?

The truth may be more complex than it appears. China and Cuba, both influential at the Council and at the UN in general, also objected to this mechanism and disassociated themselves from the resolution on Sri Lanka. Why did the Sri Lankan government not use the leverage of these friendly states to garner support from other members of the Council?

Sri Lanka did not articulate any objections to or rejection of any other item in the Resolution. It had largely undertaken to do many of the things in the previous resolutions: Repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act and appoint a committee to examine its repeal; amend the Online Safety Act, the reopening of investigations into some cases of human rights violations and the Easter Sunday bombings; to establish an independent public prosecutorial body, among other things.

In promising the Independent Public Prosecutor’s Office, they went much further than any other government to date, with the public yet unaware as to its contours, much like the (at least) 7 agreements signed with India by the Govt.

Therefore, the Govt had a good hand to play with, in any negotiations. Even after the Resolution was presented for consultations at these sessions (which is a mandated step in the process), was the Sri Lankan delegation unable to gather support for a debate at least on the one item (OSLAP) that they objected to? Obviously, the consultations with other states went cordially, as our Ambassador thanked them for their cooperation, positive suggestions and even amendments.

On behalf of Sri Lanka, our Ambassador questioned the ‘credibility, transparency of how this office was set up, its work and the budget.’ She said after 4 years, there had been no benefit to the people of Sri Lanka. She said it only served ‘those with vested interests’ and would ‘create division within the communities in Sri Lanka and will be counter-productive.’ She said nationally owned processes were best suited to ‘address matters related to human rights’.

Having said all this and on that basis rejected the Resolution, why not have a member state which had already objected to this mechanism (China, Cuba), call for a vote on this ‘counter-productive’ item on our behalf?

Inept at the international

The impression this course of action has left on the populace about this administration is one of incompetence and ineptness in dealing with the international community, inability to build a like-minded group of friends at UN forums, to gather their support to fight against one’s legitimate grievances in the international system. A TV station usually very supportive of this government, showed a member of their panel of journalists ask the government representative why they couldn’t secure a single vote for Sri Lanka.

This failure to negotiate their own preferred outcome for Sri Lanka, was predictable when this government decided not to attend the BRICS and SCO summits where they could have made or renewed contacts with the leaders of the emerging powers of the global South and lobbied their support in times of need. They are many, and wield great influence as a bloc and as individual member states at the United Nations.

It was also sadly predictable when Sri Lanka deviated from its traditional stance of standing up for others in their need, their visible, irrefutable and dire need such as in the case of Palestine, opting for vague and utterly bland language to call for peace at the UN General Assembly in reference to the raging war on Gaza, with many other leaders calling it a genocide. Sri Lanka showed itself to be playing safe and selfish, a bit player, in contrast to the time when it punched way above their weight, assuring support for itself in its own time of need.

Taj Samudra Colombo hosts International Women’s Cricket Teams

Taj Samudra, Colombo was honoured to host the national women’s cricket teams of Australia, Bangladesh, and South Africa during their recent visit to Sri Lanka. In a heartfelt display of Sri Lankan hospitality, the teams were welcomed with traditional drummers and garlanding ceremonies, symbolising the warmth and cultural richness of the island nation. A warm welcome ceremony led by the Area Director – Taj Maldives