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Critical Issues & Survey of the Philippine Diaspora Landscape

Far East Asia Diaspora Educators Consultation August 11-14, 2011, Manila, Philippines. Critical Issues & Survey of the Philippine Diaspora Landscape. Jojo Manzano Asian Theological Seminary. Waves of Filipino Migration in Search of Employment Opportunities.

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Critical Issues & Survey of the Philippine Diaspora Landscape

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  1. Far East Asia Diaspora Educators Consultation • August 11-14, 2011, Manila, Philippines Critical Issues & Survey ofthe Philippine Diaspora Landscape JojoManzano Asian Theological Seminary

  2. Waves of Filipino Migration in Search of Employment Opportunities 1920s under American colonial rule, the Filipinos worked in pineapple plantations in Hawaii, California, and to Washington and Alaska to work in fish canneries. 1960s, Filipino nurses, doctors, medical technicians filled in skill gaps in the United States, Canada and other European countries. 1970s, the phenomenon of overseas contract workers (OCWs) emerged. Filipinos leave the Philippines in even larger numbers to fill in labour shortages in rich and industrializing countries in the Middle East (e.g. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait) and the Asia-Pacific (Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, Malaysia)as construction workers, nannies, domestic workers, nurses and entertainers. http://www.poea.gov.ph/about/hiring.htm; http://pmscontario.tripod.com/id1.html

  3. Around 8.6 million to 11 million Filipinos (about 11% of the total population of the Philippines) live in 214 countries overseas. Sources: Department of Foreign Affairs, Philippine Overseas Employment Administration, Commission on Filipinos Overseas

  4. @ 2009 Where the 8M+ Filipinos are going Europe 722,427 Asia 1,074,496 Middle East 2,415,896 Americas3,582,879 Philippines Africa64,738 Sea-based 330,424 Oceania 388,520 www.poea.gov.ph

  5. Stock Estimates of Filipinos By Major World Group Total: 8,579,378 @ December 2009) www.poea.gov.ph

  6. Permanent -Immigrants or legal permanent residents abroad whose stay do not depend on work contracts. • Temporary - Persons whose stay overseas is employment related, and who are expected to return at the end of their work contracts. • Irregular - Those not properly documented or without valid residence or work permits, or who are overstaying in a foreign country. Sources: Department of Foreign Affairs, Philippine Overseas Employment Administration, Commission on Filipinos Overseas

  7. The top 10 destination countries of Filipinos: • United States of America • Saudi Arabia • Canada • United Arab Emirates • Australia • Malaysia • Japan • United Kingdom • Hong Kong • Singapore

  8. Diaspora in the Philippines • The Permanent and Temporary Migrants (OFW/OCW) • Irregular Migrants • Internal Migrants • The Foreign Migrants and Tourists in the Philippines

  9. 1. The Permanent and Temporary Migrants

  10. Permanent Migrants Filipino permanent migrants are in the developed countries of North America, particularly the United States (US). Other destinations of permanent migrants are countries in Asia, Oceania, and Europe but the proportion is far lower than that in North America. • Mostly highly educated they emigrated because of more career advancement opportunities, over and above the differences in wages • The larger proportion of permanent migrants are unemployed—housewives, students, and minors. This scenario is created by the family reunification goal of permanent migration in the US – the prime destination of Filipino emigrants.  http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=575792&publicationSubCategoryId=66

  11. Temporary Migrant Workers • Temporary migrant workers. This includes the increasing number of new-hire and the even faster increasing proportion of rehired workers. • Land-based temporary migrants are composed of professionals, service workers, production process workers, transport workers, and laborers. • Filipino temporary migrant workers are shown to be younger and better educated. Around 7 out of 10 are of ages between 24 to 44 years old and half of them have at least some tertiary education. • Temporary labor migration is likewise selective of gender, with majority of temporary migrant workers being women. http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=575792&publicationSubCategoryId=66

  12. The history of systematized export of Filipino labor abroad is a product of extreme poverty, underdevelopment and joblessness in the country, rooted in the uneven distribution of land and wealth that has benefited a handful of rich landlords, big business, cronies, and multinational companies. This system started under Spanish colonial rule, was entrenched under American colonial rule and continues to this very day—from Marcos era up to this present government administration of Benigno Aquino III. http://www.poea.gov.ph/about/hiring.htm; http://pmscontario.tripod.com/id1.html

  13. The deepening economic crisis in the Philippines has aggravated the migration of Filipinos abroad to the point where 8 million people, more than 10% of the population, now work abroad as migrant labor in 214countries. Filipino migrant workers contribute significantly to the ailing Philippines economy through their remittances. In 2010 remittances of migrant Filipinos were registered at $18. 7billion. This contribution is recognized by the government. Migrant workers are hailed as "new economic heroes“. http://www.poea.gov.ph/about/hiring.htm; http://pmscontario.tripod.com/id1.html

  14. The Philippine government has been unable to provide protection to its migrant workforce, despite the hefty fees OCWs have to pay in order to be employed overseas. Many Filipinos continue to experience abuse and exploitation—contract violations, termination without cause, rape, sexual harassment, and even death. • The anguish and ordeal of migrant Filipinos continue. The conditions that confront them necessitate the continued organizing, education and mobilization work, in order that they can better defend their rights and welfare abroad, and to address the root causes of migration in the Philippines. http://pmscontario.tripod.com/id1.html

  15. Deployment Trend of OFWs 1975 - 2001 Ramos ‘92-’98 Gloria ‘00-’10 Cory ‘86-’92 Marcos ‘64-’86 Erap ‘98-’00 www.poea.gov.ph

  16. Deployment Trend of OFWs 2004 - 2010 Gloria ‘00-10 Nonoy ‘10-16 www.poea.gov.ph

  17. 2010 Deployment of OFWs Total: 1,470,826 www.poea.gov.ph

  18. 2010 daily deployment average of Landbased OFWs a3,303* daily! 1,164 new hire; 2,139 rehires *Figures do not include Sea-based workers www.poea.gov.ph

  19. 2010 Top Ten OFW Destinations(Landbased, New Hires & Rehires) http://www.poea.gov.ph/about/hiring.htm

  20. 2010 OFW Deployment by Major Occupational Category (Land-based, New Hires & Rehires) http://www.poea.gov.ph/about/hiring.htm

  21. 2010 Top Ten OFW Deployment by OccupationalCategories and Gender (New Hires) http://www.poea.gov.ph/about/hiring.htm

  22. 2. The Irregular Migrants

  23. Irregular migrants people who have fled their homes for reasons similar to refugees, but who remain within their own national territory and are subject to the laws of that state. Irregular migrants are a hidden population of people thus difficult to know their exact number.  They avoid identification for fear of arrest and deportation. Irregular migrants are everywhere but a significant number of them are in East Malaysia. • http://www.irregularmigration.info/2010/11/why-not-bilog-filipino-irregular.html

  24. Definition: This entry includes those persons residing in a country as refugees or internally displaced persons (IDPs). The definition of a refugee according to a United Nations Convention is "a person who is outside his/her country of nationality or habitual residence; has a well-founded fear of persecution because of his/her race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion; and is unable or unwilling to avail himself/herself of the protection of that country, or to return there, for fear of persecution • The term "internally displaced person" is not specifically covered in the UN Convention; it is used to describe

  25. Fillipino refugees in Borneo, Malaysia • Since 2008, sporadic attacks by the militants have forced more than 400,000 Muslim to flee their homes in Mindanao. • About 100,000 fled to Malaysia joining others who have settled there over the past four decades of war in Mindanao. • "Many have become stateless • Scores of refugee camps dot the coastline of Malaysia's Sabah state, on the tip of Borneo island. The camps are poor and squalid. • Many of them have been in the camps so long that they no longer identify with their own country. Many also are second and third generation and sometimes even fourth generation who no longer have any form of identity or knowledge of the Philippines. http://www.voanews.com/english/news/Aid-Workers-Urge-Philippines-Government-to-Address-Needs-of-Filipino-refugees.html

  26. 3. The Internal Migrants

  27. Refugees and internally displaced persons:   With the continued tension between government troops and Muslim militants and NPA, many Filipinos are displaced.

  28. 4. The Foreign Migrants and Tourists in the Philippines

  29. 2010 total number of visitors in the Philippines: 3.5 million

  30. http://www.census.gov.ph/data/quickstat/qs1107tb.pdf

  31. Foreign Nationals in the Philippines • Over the past few years there’s been a growing number of foreign nationals living in the Philippines. Most of those migrating to the Philippines are Americans, Chinese, Koreans, Japanese, Indians and Europeans. For several reasons • Married to Filipinas, • To invest in businesses, • To study, • To live here because of the low cost of living and • To retire. The government is also marketing the Philippines as a retirement haven for foreign nationals. http://EzineArticles.com/4699354

  32. South Koreans in the Philippines Total Population: 115,400 (2009) Most live in: Metro Manila, Baguio, Cebu, Iloilo, Bacolod, Davao, Cagayan de Oro.

  33. Indians in the Philippines Approximately 38,000 Indians and Indian Filipinos Most of them are Sindhi and Punjabi, but there is also a large Tamil population as well. Many Indians have intermarried with Filipinos, Most live in:  Manila, Cebu, Davao and Zamboanga http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non resident_Indian_and_Person_of_Indian_Origin

  34. Foreign Students in the Philippines Bureau of Immigration 2010 statistics: • 26,823 Koreans    • 3,395 Chinese nationals, • 2,980 Iranians • 1,004 Americans.        http://www.journal.com.ph/index.php/news/national/1324-south-koreans-top-list-of-foreign-studes-in-ph

  35. Critical Issues of Philippine Diaspora

  36. The weakening the Filipino family. The increased number of parents now working abroad has resulted in prolonged separation of families. This has led to a radical change in the family structure: the emergence of single-parents and female-headed households, and households headed by older children of OFWs. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20061117-33105/Migration_weakening_Filipino_family_--_DSWD

  37. “Feminization” of migration. Female new hires, mostly mothers, comprised 72 percent of total deployment in 2005. Mothers are perceived as the first teachers of Filipino children and play a crucial role in their formation and transition to adulthood. Millions of Filipino children grow up without their mothers and the psychological support and guidance from their parents. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20061117-33105/Migration_weakening_Filipino_family_--_DSWD

  38. Threat to national development. As more and more skilled workers and professionals opt to work abroad to support their families, the country is left with fewer skilled workers and professionals to help with nation-building. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20061117-33105/Migration_weakening_Filipino_family_--_DSWD

  39. Increasing number of irregular migrants. Mostly under-aged and low-skilled to become service workers. Disturbance in the Middle East. Many workers had to return home in the Philippines with no jobs and little or no financial resources. Host Government Policy. E.g. Saudi Arabia will impliment “Saudinization” of low-skilled workers. This will mean many people will return home.

  40. Philippine Government Policy. For financial reasons, the Philippine government are aggressive marketing Filipino workers but with very little regard for the workers’ welfare and the left-behind. The Evangelical Churches’ Response. Although there are efforts to minister to Filipino migrants and their families as well as to the foreigners, many evangelical churches are still not responding to the challenge of diaspora ministry.

  41. end

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