Friday, March 13, 2026

As workers face renewed jobs crisis, green public employment and industrial policy asked

 

Photo by Rappler

The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) today called on the Marcos Jr. administration to urgently rethink its economic and employment priorities following the sharp increase in unemployment recorded in January 2026. The group said the latest labor force figures show troubling signs for Filipino workers, with the unemployment rate climbing to 6 percent, a steep rise compared with 4.3 percent during the same period last year. The level is also approaching the rates seen near the end of the pandemic, when many Filipinos were still struggling to regain lost livelihoods.

 

“The unemployment spike is a warning sign that workers are being left behind. Government cannot sit back and wait for the private sector to solve the jobs crisis. It must actively create jobs and rebuild the economy around the needs of working people,” said Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and Marikina City councilor.

 

The labor organization also cautioned that external developments could further weaken job creation in the coming months. Heightened geopolitical tensions and the economic disruptions stemming from United States President Donald Trump’s war on Iran are already contributing to a global economic downturn.

 

Given these challenges, PM urged the government to immediately implement stronger public employment interventions to support displaced and underemployed workers. It proposed the establishment of a large-scale public jobs program that would provide sustained work rather than short-lived activities. The group stressed that existing programs that offer only a few days of temporary work are not enough to stabilize incomes.

 

Magtubo insisted that “Unlike existing short-term emergency programs that provide only a few days of work, the program should guarantee at least 100 days of paid employment per worker, prioritizing displaced workers, rural laborers, and communities heavily affected by climate disasters.”

 

PM suggested prioritizing green and climate-related jobs, particularly in rural areas where employment losses have been severe. Workers in agriculture, forestry, and fisheries have faced repeated setbacks due to destructive typhoons and widespread flooding linked to worsening climate conditions in recent years.

 

Projects focused on environmental rehabilitation, climate adaptation, and disaster prevention could both generate employment and strengthen the country’s resilience to climate impacts, the group said. Beyond emergency measures, PM stressed that the Philippines needs a long-term development strategy centered on job creation.

 

“We call for a state-led industrial policy that actively promotes labor-intensive industries capable of producing for the domestic market. The government must place decent work at the heart of economic policy. Without decisive action, rising unemployment will continue to undermine the livelihoods of working families across the country,” Magtubo argued.

PRESS RELEASE

March 13, 2026


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