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The hidden costs of ignoring generational needs

In boardrooms across the Philippines, leaders are asking the same familiar questions.

Why is employee engagement declining despite competitive pay and benefits? Why is succession planning becoming more urgent, yet younger employees seem reluctant to step into leadership roles? Why are younger customers harder to convince even when products are strong? And why does adaptation to change feel increasingly slow, exhausting, and fragile?

Behind these challenges is a deeper issue: Generational needs — both as consumers and as employees — are being misunderstood or oversimplified. When organizations rely on outdated assumptions about what motivates people at different life stages, the true costs are often underestimated.

These costs show up in very real ways: disengaged employees who may be capable and confident but no longer fully committed; brands that slowly deteriorate in customer consideration; innovation efforts that struggle to gain traction; and change initiatives that stall before value is realized. Over time, these blind spots translate into missed market opportunities and growing organizational risk.

Let’s take a closer look at the two levels — business and organizational — in which the drawbacks are manifested.

BUSINESS-LEVEL HIDDEN COSTS

Brand deterioration

Brands rarely collapse. They fade.

When generational needs are overlooked, brands gradually lose mental space among emerging customer cohorts. Products may still function, pricing may remain competitive, and distribution may still be wide — but the brand no longer feels for me.

When a single brand narrative attempts to speak to all generations in the same way, it resonates with none deeply.

Messaging becomes generic, positioning is diluted, and emotional connection weakens. Declining customer consideration follows — not necessarily because competitors are superior, but because the brand feels increasingly disconnected and irrelevant.

While all generations may share similar values, their perspectives differ — shaped by distinct experiences and expectations.

For example, while money continues to be a top value among Filipinos, financial motivation differs by generation. Gen Z seeks independence and non-reliance on parents. Gen Y aims for financial freedom — the ability to spend without constant trade-offs. Gen X prioritizes a comfortable life for both self and family. Boomers focus on continued support for family, including grandchildren. When brands treat “financial value” as a single idea, these nuances are easily missed.

Hidden cost: Marketing spend rises simply to maintain awareness, while conversion, advocacy, and loyalty quietly weaken underneath.

Lackluster innovation outcomes

Many organizations believe they are innovating because they are launching new initiatives, features, or formats. Yet many also complain about lackluster performance from these efforts.  

Increasingly, companies are turning to Project Alphabet to understand what opportunity spaces open up when they look beyond surface demographics and instead decode deeply held values, fears, aspirations, and life contexts by generation. 

When generational needs are misunderstood, innovation solves internal assumptions rather than real human tensions; new offerings become incremental improvements rather than meaningful shifts; and adoption lags despite technically sound solutions. 

Different generations experience unresolved tensions. When these tensions are not decoded accurately, innovation becomes detached from lived reality. Products and services may make sense internally, but fail to resonate externally.  

This explains why organizations often ask, “Why didn’t the market respond?” – and this question is raised long after launch, investment, and effort have already been sunk.  

Hidden cost: Innovation investment delivers low returns, creates fatigue, and increases risk aversion toward future initiatives. 

ORGANIZATIONAL-LEVEL HIDDEN COSTS

Low engagement and weak talent attraction

Engagement declines long before people resign.  

Project Alphabet’s findings show that definitions of rewards and recognition are no longer straightforward.   

Younger generations tend to favor cash flexibility and experiences, while older employees continue to value symbolic recognition. At the same time, changing definitions of family have increased expectations for more inclusive benefits — such as coverage for pets or LGBTQ+ partners.  

The workplace is increasingly where values collide. Flashpoints emerge in predictable ways: work-life balance as a baseline versus something to be earned; short, visual communication versus formal, direct messaging; salary as an entry requirement versus culture and clarity as retention drivers. These tensions also debunk common stereotypes — loyalty is not exclusive to older generations, just as younger ones will stay when the culture works for them.  

Yet, employer branding often lags behind these shifting expectations. Many organizations continue to signal stability, scale, and tenure, while younger talent looks for growth, purpose, learning velocity, and a sense of progression that feels meaningful.  

Over time, organizations struggle not only to retain talent, but also to attract the energy and capability needed for future growth.  

Hidden cost: Higher attrition, rising hiring costs, longer vacancy cycles, and a workforce that does not fully commit.  

Succession planning at risk

Succession planning is crucial to the sustainability of any organization.  

When generational needs are ignored, leadership pipelines thin out, not because talent is unavailable, but because leadership pathways feel misaligned or unattractive. High-potential employees may not see leadership roles as worth the personal trade-offs, while senior leaders may struggle to trust readiness that looks different from their own career journeys.  

Linear career paths are no longer the norm. Many employees are comfortable remaining individual contributors or prefer less cut-throat corporate cultures. Without acknowledging these shifts, organizations risk misreading hesitation as lack of ambition.  

Over time, leadership transitions become riskier as institutional knowledge declines. When transitions finally occur, organizations often realize too late that readiness was assumed rather than intentionally built.  

As the workforce mix continues to evolve, companies must pay closer attention to the implications for leadership continuity.  

Hidden cost: Leadership continuity becomes a vulnerability to long-term sustainability.

BRINGING THE TWO TOGETHER

The business and organizational costs of ignoring generational needs reinforce each other.

Weak brand relevance reduces market momentum. Lackluster innovation dampens growth. Low engagement and slow implementation make recovery harder. Succession risk compounds long-term uncertainty.

To truly work across generations, organizations need generational fluency — the ability to see beyond labels and harness the strengths of all generations to inspire teams, connect with consumers, and grow the business. — Barbara Young, Vice-President for Corporate and Commercial Strategy, Acumen (www.acumen.com.ph)

 


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Singapore investment commitments rise in 2025 as China’s share soars

REUTERS

SINGAPORE — Singapore drew more investment in 2025 despite geopolitical and economic uncertainties, with China forming a larger share of total commitments and business expenditures, according to data released on Monday by the city state’s Economic Development Board.

Fixed asset investment commitments in Singapore rose 5.2% to S$14.2 billion ($11.2 billion), from S$13.5 billion a year earlier, while total business expenditure rose 6% to S$8.9 billion, the agency said in a statement.

Singapore has seen an influx of Chinese companies looking to domicile in Singapore to reduce the risks to their business arising from the growing geopolitical tensions between China and the United States.

China’s share of fixed asset commitments accounted for 20.6% of the total last year, exceeding the United States for the first time, with the US share falling to 17.3%. In 2024, China accounted for only 2.5% of the commitments, with the United States at 55.5%.

EDB chairman Png Cheong Boon said that many Chinese companies are seeking to expand internationally in response to slower domestic growth.

“We have a good track record of hosting MNCs from the US, Europe, Japan, India, Southeast Asian countries, and China. We continue to look towards the US and Europe to be key sources of investment commitments in terms of stock and flow,” he added.

China also accounted for 50.7% of business expenditure in Singapore in 2025, up from 15% in 2024.

The manufacturing sector remained dominant and contributed S$12.1 billion in fixed asset commitments, led by new semiconductor manufacturing plants catering to strong global AI-related demand, as well as the biomedical, chemicals, and aerospace sectors.

However, the number of jobs created fell by 16.0% to 15,700 in 2025, from 18,700 in 2024.

Mr. Png said job creation has been impacted by rapid technological advancements, with companies now able to do more with fewer employees. New investments yield fewer opportunities than before, he said.

“To create the same number of jobs, EDB will have to bring in more investments. This means engaging more companies, both existing and new ones, across more sectors and regions and of different company sizes and growth stages,” he said.

Monday’s EDB data comes ahead of Singapore’s budget, which is set to be delivered by Prime Minister and Finance Minister Lawrence Wong on Feb 12.

Singapore Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong said in a media interview in January that the city state can no longer assume that economic growth will generate jobs.

“With automation, AI and productivity, as all of us hope to achieve, there will be higher value-adding industries and business activities. That means with higher value-add per worker, you will not need as many workers,” he said. ($1 = S$1.27) — Reuters

Portugal elects Socialist as president by landslide, but far right grows

ANDRE LERGIER-UNSPLASH

LISBON — Moderate Socialist Antonio Jose Seguro secured a landslide victory and a five-year term as Portugal’s president in a runoff vote on Sunday, beating his far-right, anti-establishment rival Andre Ventura.

Mr. Seguro, who received backing from prominent conservatives after the first round amid concerns over what many see as Mr. Ventura’s populist, authoritarian tendencies, becomes the first Socialist head of state in 20 years, succeeding Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, a conservative, after two terms in office.

“The response the Portuguese people gave today, their commitment to freedom, democracy, and the future of our country, leaves me naturally moved and proud of our nation,” Mr. Seguro, 63, told reporters.

A succession of storms in recent days failed to deter voters, with turnout at about the same level as in the first round on January 18, even though several small municipalities had to postpone voting by a week due to floods.

With 95% of votes counted, Mr. Seguro garnered 66%. Mr. Ventura trailed behind at 34%, still set to secure a much stronger result than the 22.8% his anti-immigration Chega party achieved in last year’s general election.

Ballots in large cities such as Lisbon and Porto are counted towards the end. Two exit polls placed Mr. Seguro in the 67%-73% range and Mr. Ventura at 27%-33%.

Last year, Chega became the second-largest parliamentary force, overtaking the Socialists and landing behind the center-right ruling alliance, which garnered 31.2%.

VENTURA’S POLITICAL CLOUT
Despite his loss on Sunday, 43-year-old Mr. Ventura, a charismatic former TV sports commentator, can now boast increased support, reflecting the growing influence of the far right in Portugal and much of Europe.

“The entire political system, across both right and left, united against me,” Mr. Ventura told reporters as he left a Catholic mass in central Lisbon. “Even so… I believe the leadership of the right has been defined and secured today. I expect to lead that political space from this day forward.”

Portugal’s presidency is a largely ceremonial role but holds some key powers, including the ability to dissolve parliament and block legislation under certain circumstances.

Some analysts suggest the conservative support for Mr. Seguro, along with Mr. Ventura’s high rejection rate of roughly two-thirds of the electorate, could indicate that even if Chega eventually came out on top in the next general election, a potential centrist alliance would preclude it from governing.

SEGURO’S WARNING
Mr. Seguro has cast himself as the candidate of a “modern and moderate” left who can actively mediate to avert political crises and defend democratic values.

Still, he had warned that if elected he would not enact the minority government’s proposed labor reform legislation unless unions, which see it as favoring employers at the expense of workers’ rights, agree to it first.

The government argues the overhaul of the labor code is essential to boost productivity and economic growth. — Reuters

Venezuela frees prominent opposition members as prisoner releases continue

A person holds a Venezuelan flag as government supporters gather after US President Donald Trump said the US has struck Venezuela and captured its President Nicolas Maduro, in Caracas, Venezuela, January 3, 2026. — REUTERS/GABY ORAA

VENEZUELAN opposition politicians Juan Pablo Guanipa and Freddy Superlano, along with prominent lawyer Perkins Rocha, have been freed from jail, their families and human rights organizations said on Sunday, marking the latest high-profile releases by the government in Caracas.

Under mounting pressure from the US to free political prisoners, rights group Foro Penal said some 35 political prisoners were released on Sunday and that it was verifying additional cases.

The organization previously confirmed that 383 political prisoners had been let go since the Venezuelan government announced on January 8 that it would begin a new series of releases.

Mr. Guanipa, Mr. Rocha, and Mr. Superlano are close allies of Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition leader Maria Corina Machado. Mr. Rocha, a lawyer for the Vente Venezuela opposition movement, was detained in August 2024 on terrorism and related charges. Mr. Guanipa was arrested last May after months in hiding for allegedly leading a terrorist plot.

Venezuela’s opposition and human rights groups have said for years that the country’s socialist government uses detentions to stamp out dissent.

Leader of the Voluntad Popular Party, Freddy Superlano, was arrested after the 2024 presidential elections. He was captured on video being pushed into the back of an unmarked car surrounded by armed security agents and according to his wife, spent many months in isolation. Foro Penal confirmed he was among those released on February 8.

All three men have denied all the allegations against them, either directly or through family members and supporters.

“Ten months in hiding and almost nine months detained here,” Mr. Guanipa said in a video posted on X on Sunday following his release. “There’s a lot to talk about regarding the present and future of Venezuela, always with the truth front and center.”

Ms. Machado on Sunday celebrated the latest releases in a statement on X, calling for all political prisoners to be released.

The government denies holding political prisoners and says those jailed have committed crimes. Officials say nearly 900 of these people have been released, but they have not been clear about the timeline and appear to be including releases from previous years. The government has not provided an official list of how many prisoners will be released or revealed their identities.

Others released so far include Rafael Tudares, the son-in-law of former opposition presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez. Mr. Tudares was jailed for more than a year, during which he was sentenced to 30 years on terrorism charges that his family has roundly denied.

AMNESTY LEGISLATION UNDER CONSIDERATION
Venezuela’s interim President Delcy Rodriguez has announced a proposed “amnesty law” for hundreds of prisoners in the country, and said the infamous Helicoide detention center in Caracas, which rights groups have long denounced as the site of prisoner abuse, will be converted into a center for sport and social services in the capital.

The legislation, which would grant immediate clemency to people jailed for participating in political protests or criticizing public figures, return assets of those detained and cancel Interpol and other international measures previously issued by the government – passed in an initial vote at the National Assembly this week. It will need to be approved a second time to become law.

Ms. Rodriguez took office after the US captured and deposed Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro last month.

Venezuela’s authorities have been releasing the political prisoners and complying with US demands on oil deals since Mr. Maduro’s capture. — Reuters

Dollar reserves hit 16-month high

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE PESO could gain some support even amid some volatility in the foreign exchange market as the Philippines’ dollar reserves hit its highest level in over a year, analysts said.

“The relatively higher GIR (is seen) to provide a greater buffer for the peso exchange rate vs. the US dollar, as fundamentally supported by the continued growth in the country’s structural US dollar inflows especially from OFW (overseas Filipino worker) remittances, BPO (business process outsourcing) revenues, tourism receipts, foreign investments, among others,” Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in an e-mail.

This came after the country’s gross international reserves (GIR) stood at a 16-month high of $112.515 billion in January, climbing by an annual 8.95% from $103.271 billion a year ago, based on preliminary data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

It was the highest GIR level since the $112.707 billion recorded at end-September 2024.

Month on month, it went up by 1.52% from $110.833 billion in December.

Analysts said the uptick in foreign reserves was driven by higher dollar inflows as well as valuation gains from the central bank’s foreign investments and gold holdings.

“The jump in GIR mainly reflects stronger dollar inflows — from exports, BPOs, and remittances — alongside higher valuations of the BSP’s foreign investments and gold holdings, which helped push reserves to their highest in over a year,” Jonathan L. Ravelas, a senior adviser at Reyes Tacandong & Co., said in a Viber message.

International reserves are the central bank’s foreign assets held mostly as investments in foreign-issued securities, foreign exchange and monetary gold, among others.

These are supplemented by claims to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the form of reserve position in the fund and special drawing rights (SDRs).

The BSP said the level of dollar reserves in January is enough to cover about 4.1 times the country’s short-term external debt based on residual maturity.

It also equates to 7.5 months’ worth of imports of goods and payments of services and primary income, more than double the three-month standard.

“The latest GIR level ensures availability of foreign exchange to meet balance of payments financing needs, such as for payment of imports and debt service, in extreme conditions when there are no export earnings or foreign loans,” the BSP said in a statement released late on Friday.

Preliminary central bank data showed that its gold holdings amounted to $20.667 billion at end-January, surging by 75.87% from the $11.751 billion seen a year ago. It also climbed by 11.25% from $18.578 billion at end-December.

However, the central bank’s foreign investments fell by 0.47% year on year to $85.966 billion in January from $86.368 billion a year ago, and by 1.11% from $86.926 billion a month ago.

Meanwhile, the Philippines’ reserve position in the IMF stood at $730.2 million, up by 8.77% from $671.3 million a year earlier and by 0.4% from $727.3 million in the previous month.

SDRs — or the amount the Philippines can tap from the IMF’s reserve currency basket — were 5.66% higher at $3.943 billion as of end January from $3.732 billion last year. It was unchanged from December.

On the other hand, the BSP’s foreign exchange holdings soared by 61.48% to $1.208 billion from $748.2 million the prior year and by 83.34% from $659 million at end-December.

“With GIR now comfortably above traditional adequacy metrics, it gives the BSP enough firepower to smooth volatility, reassure markets, and keep the peso from overshooting even when global conditions turn choppy,” Mr. Ravelas said.

Meanwhile, John Paolo R. Rivera, a senior research fellow at the Philippine Institute for Development Studies, said the latest GIR level equips the BSP with ample resources to protect the peso from excessive fluctuations.

“While it cannot fully prevent depreciation driven by global USD (US dollar) strength and risk sentiment, the current reserve level helps anchor market confidence and allows calibrated intervention to prevent disorderly currency swings,” he added via Viber.

The local unit had a weak performance at the start of the year as it continued to trade around the P58- to P59-a-dollar level. On Jan. 15, it closed at P59.46 against the greenback, breaking the previous record low of P59.44 seen just the day prior.

On Friday, the local unit gained 10.5 centavos to close at P58.585 versus the dollar from its P58.69 finish on Thursday.

The BSP expects GIR to reach $110 billion by yearend. — Katherine K. Chan

S&P sees steady growth in bank lending despite slowing PHL economy

Peoples walk past automated teller machines in Makati City, June 23, 2016. — REUTERS

By Katherine K. Chan, Reporter

BANK LENDING in the Philippines may continue to post double-digit growth this year, S&P Global Ratings said, even as the flood control fiasco continues to dampen business and consumer confidence.

S&P Global Ratings Director Nikita Anand said they still see banks’ loan growth ranging between 11% and 13% this year, unchanged from their earlier projection.

“Our credit growth forecast for 2026 remains 11%-13%, primarily driven by consumer loans,” she told BusinessWorld in an e-mail.

Latest data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed that universal and commercial banks’ total outstanding loans rose by 10.3% to P13.988 trillion as of November from P12.676 trillion in the same period in 2024. It was the same growth rate seen at end-October.

Ms. Anand also noted that consumer loans could see faster growth than corporate loans this year.

“This is because of (the) underserved nature of (the) Philippine market where consumer loans are growing fast from a smaller base,” she said. “Also, some corporates could hold off on capital expenditure plans amid tough operating conditions and rapidly evolving external environment.”

Based on BSP data, consumer loans climbed by 22.9% year on year to P1.892 trillion as of November from P1.54 trillion previously. Month on month, it eased from the 23.1% growth in October.

Meanwhile, big banks’ loans to businesses reached P11.789 trillion in the 11-month period, growing by 9% from P10.815 trillion in the previous year.

Domestic bank lending will likely gain some boost from further monetary policy easing this year, S&P also said.

Currently, the benchmark interest rate stands at an over three-year low of 4.5%.

Since the Monetary Board began its easing cycle in August 2024, it has so far lowered key borrowing costs by a cumulative 200 basis points (bps).

In a separate commentary, United Overseas Bank Ltd. (UOB) Group Global Economics & Markets Research said the Monetary Board could stand pat at its first policy meeting this year, before easing anew in the second quarter once it has more data to consider. 

“While we do not rule out the possibility of another 25-bp policy rate cut at this meeting, we continue to believe that the BSP can afford to remain patient,” UOB Senior Economist Julia Goh and economist Loke Siew Ting said on Feb. 5. “Additional incoming data — particularly inflation data for February to April and the (first-quarter) GDP (gross domestic product) release in early May — and greater clarity on FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) leadership changes will be crucial for any policy adjustments in (the second quarter).”

The UOB economists expect the central bank to deliver a final 25-bp cut in the second quarter to bring the key interest rate to a terminal of 4.25%.

After headline inflation returned to the BSP’s target range for the first time in about a year at 2% in January, the Monetary Board said they see the current easing cycle nearing its end.

However, BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. has said they could deliver a sixth straight cut if they determine demand-side issues from the weaker-than-expected fourth-quarter economic growth.

This came after the country’s GDP slumped to a post-pandemic low of 3% in the last quarter of 2025 due to the lingering effects of the flood control corruption scandal. This brought the full-year GDP growth to 4.4%, the worst in five years.

Still, the central bank chief noted that inflation remains their top deciding factor in their monetary policy path.

The Monetary Board will have its first policy review for 2026 on Feb. 19.

DBM chief expects lower 2027 budget proposals

Budget Secretary Rolando U. Toledo — AUBREY ROSE A. INOSANTE

By Aubrey Rose A. Inosante, Reporter

THE DEPARTMENT of Budget and Management (DBM) expects government agencies to submit lower funding proposals for 2027 amid stricter vetting guidelines triggered by the flood control corruption scandal.

Acting Budget Secretary Rolando U. Toledo said requests may come in below the P11-trillion plan last year, after the agency issued stricter guidelines in its 2027 budget call in preparation for the National Expenditure Program (NEP).

“Yes, we expect (lower proposals), but we cannot prevent them from submitting more than what is supposed to be,” he told BusinessWorld on the sidelines of a University of the Philippines School of Economics event on Feb. 6.

“But of course, given the guidance we’re providing them, we hope the proposals will be lower,” he added.

The DBM began preparing the fiscal year 2027 budget through a series of budget forums with government agencies and government-owned and -controlled corporations late last month.

“We amplified the call to safeguard our budget from corruption,” Mr. Toledo said.

Safeguards include requiring agencies to secure approval from Regional Development Councils for priority programs and projects, reinforcing coordination among national agencies, regional offices, and local governments to prevent spending that is misaligned with administration priorities.

Additionally, the DBM mandates that proposals are backed by data, past performance metrics, and detailed program plans with clear procurement and implementation timelines and milestones.

“This ensures that only implementation-ready, high-impact proposals receive funding, reinforcing both equity and the effective allocation of public resources,” he said.

Mr. Toledo also pledged stricter oversight and reforms, saying agency heads will be required to certify accounts payables using signed, notarized documents to ensure projects are legitimate and not “ghost” transactions.

He also said the agency’s Technical Innovations for the NEP Application will automate the Executive’s budget tracking and formatting, significantly reducing the time and risk of discrepancies in report generation and review, which is expected to be rolled out in fiscal year 2028.

RISK OF UNDERFUNDING
Analysts said a sharp cut in 2027 budget proposals signal more disciplined spending but risk underfunding of key programs and misalignment with economic priorities.

Jonathan L. Ravelas, a senior adviser at Reyes Tacandong & Co., said the stricter guidelines will likely force agencies to scale back their 2027 proposals, as the DBM continues to stress that fiscal space remains tight.

“Lower proposals could help ease fiscal pressure, but the challenge now is to cut the fat without starving essential programs — so agencies need to be smarter, not just smaller, in what they submit,” he told BusinessWorld in a Viber message.

Mr. Ravelas noted that corruption tied to anomalous flood control projects pushed the government toward a more disciplined, longer-term approach to budget preparation, with tougher validation.

However, Leonardo A. Lanzona, an economics professor at the Ateneo de Manila University, said that as the DBM tightens access to the budget, agencies may respond with fewer or smaller proposals, a move that doesn’t necessarily align spending with economic priorities or growth programs.

“You could end up with agencies abandoning worthwhile projects that support government economic goals simply because the access process is too burdensome, while the fundamental question of strategic resource allocation remains unaddressed,” he said in a Messenger chat over the weekend.

Mr. Lanzona said the lack of fiscal discipline amounts to “an austerity program without a clear goal,” warning it could cause delay rather than delivering meaningful budget reform.

John Paolo R. Rivera, a senior research fellow at the Philippine Institute for Development Studies, said agencies may become overly cautious in budgeting, which may leave key infrastructure and social programs with less funding.

“While the corruption scandal may prompt more transparency and tighter justification of budgets, the shift will only be structural if reforms are institutionalized rather than treated as a short-term compliance response,” he said.

UNPROGRAMMED APPROPRIATIONS
At the same event, Mr. Toledo rejected anew calls to remove unprogrammed appropriations (UA) from the national spending plan.

“The unprogrammed appropriation is not really a bad proposal, having that in the budget. What is wrong is how do we use unprogrammed appropriations,” he told reporters.

According to the DBM, the UA refers to funds that can be used only for specific projects when revenue collection exceeds targets or when additional grants or foreign funds are secured.

Mr. Toledo added that he will not recommend scrapping the UA, as many key projects are still awaiting approval. Without the UA, projects may delay implementation, he said.

“Just like for 2026, we have limited only to three particular lists of unprogrammed appropriations. One is for the foreign assistance project, the risk management program, plus the AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippines) modernization program,” he said.

Mr. Toledo also said he wants to continue limiting the standby funds to below 5% of the budget.

Targeted support eyed for workers after jobless rate jumped in 2025

JOBSEEKERS attend a recruitment activity in Manila, Nov. 19, 2025. — PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

By Erika Mae P. Sinaking

THE GOVERNMENT will pivot in 2026 toward targeted job support in sectors facing worker displacement, as the Philippines looks to protect employment gains that stayed within official targets last year, Labor Secretary Bienvenido E. Laguesma said.

The Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) would prioritize job matching and infrastructure-related opportunities for construction workers and expand emergency employment and livelihood assistance for displaced workers in agriculture and fisheries, he told BusinessWorld in a Viber message on Sunday.

The DoLE would also step up skill upgrading and reskilling programs tied to climate-resilient and more stable, year-round jobs, he added.

“For 2026, DoLE will also work closely with partner agencies on skill upgrading/reskilling on climate-resilient jobs, and more stable, year-round employment,” Mr. Laguesma said.

The shift comes after labor market indicators for 2025 landed within benchmarks set under the Philippine Development Plan. The Philippine Statistics Authority’s Labor Force Survey showed the unemployment rate rose to 4.2% in 2025 from 3.8% in 2024. The underemployment rate was unchanged at 11.9% year on year in 2025.

While the figures point to resilience in the headline labor market, the data reflect the vulnerability of construction, agriculture, and fisheries sectors to weather disruptions, project delays, and seasonal swings.

Analysts said that the December labor data mask a sharp slowdown in job creation and rising volatility in key sectors.

In December, the jobless rate rose to 4.4% from 3.1% in the same month a year ago, while the underemployment rate improved to 8% from 10.9% a year ago.

The total employed Filipinos fell by 758,000 to 49.4 million in December 2025 from 50.2 million a year earlier.

“This is only partly attributable to the corruption scandal-driven decline in construction which fell by 550,000 year on year — other sectors also shed large numbers of jobs such as agriculture, manufacturing, and transportation and storage,” Jose Enrique “Sonny” A. Africa, executive director of think tank IBON Foundation, said.

For the full year, he noted there were only around 172,000 jobs added from 2024, “barely one-fourth of the historical average of around 700,000 annually in the last 50 years.”

“It is also the fifth worst year of job creation after contractions in 2000, 2017, 2019 and 2020 and just a 90,000 increase in 2015,” Mr. Africa said.

“Looking beyond just December round data, it is clear that the labor market is characterized by weakening job creation and extreme volatility,” he added.

Santiago Nolla, president of the National Union of Building and Construction Workers, said there were already massive layoffs in the construction industry in August 2025 as projects tied to anomalous flood control contracts stalled.

“We were no longer surprised because workers had already been feeling the impact, as early as August 2025 when the flood control scandal erupted, there was massive displacement of workers employed by the identified contractors,” he said.

Mr. Nolla urged the government to accelerate the resumption of projects, expand free training through the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority, and prioritize local hiring of displaced workers once project implementation restarts.

John Paolo R. Rivera, a senior research fellow at the Philippine Institute for Development Studies, said the services sector continued to cushion the broader labor market.

“The strong hiring in BPOs (business process outsourcing) and tourism-related services suggests that the Philippine labor market remains structurally resilient, with services continuing to act as a shock absorber when public spending and investment weaken,” he said.

“Looking ahead, policymakers should closely monitor business sentiment, tourism recovery, digital economy expansion, and global demand for outsourced services, as these will sustain services-led hiring,” he added.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said government underspending on infrastructure in late 2025, the exit of Philippine offshore gaming operators, and weaker investor sentiment were all major drags on employment last year.

“Going forward, catch-up spending of the government especially on infrastructure to make up for the softness in the latter part of 2026 based on priority anti-corruption/good governance measures and reforms… could help boost economic activities that would fundamentally lead to better local employment data,” Mr. Ricafort said.

DoST-NCR, PAIBA team up to fast-track AI-driven innovation for MSMEs

The Department of Science and Technology–National Capital Region (DoST-NCR) and the Philippine AI Business Association (PAIBA) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) last Jan. 21 at the Novotel Manila Hotel, seeking to ease the access of businesses, startups, and researchers in Metro Manila to adopt new technologies and achieve digital transformation and artificial intelligence (AI)-driven innovation.

The MoU was signed by DoST-NCR Regional Director Engr. Romelen T. Tresvalles and PAIBA Founding President Jerry Ilao, solidifying both institutions’ commitment to jointly promote science, technology, and innovation (STI)- and AI-enabled initiatives that support business competitiveness and industry modernization.

Under the partnership, the DoST-NCR and PAIBA will jointly integrate AI-focused support into the DoST’s flagship programs, including the Small Enterprise Technology Upgrading Program (SETUP) and the Innovation Hub (iHub). Through these platforms, MSMEs and startups will gain access to targeted training, mentorship, and digital transformation pathways aligned with Industry 4.0. The collaboration will bridge transformative technologies with inclusive, practical adoption, empowering MSMEs to move beyond catching up and actively compete and grow in an increasingly digital economy.

The MoU signing, which coincided with the Induction of PAIBA’s Founding Members, was complemented by a learning session on the impact of AI in business, as well as high level networking activities that connected founders, executives, and industry practitioners across sectors.

On hand to witness the event were Osric Primo Bern A. Quibot, assistant regional director for Technical Operations; Engr. Lota M. Paras-Bagunu, officer-in-charge of the DoST-NCR PAMAMAZON Clustered Area Science and Technology Office; and Anne Marie B. Francisco, founding vice-president of PAIBA.

Through this new government-private sector partnership, the DoST-NCR and PAIBA aim to cultivate a future-ready business environment in the National Capital Region by bridging STI and AI, enhancing local industry competitiveness, and fostering a stronger innovation and entrepreneurship ecosystem.

 


SparkUp is BusinessWorld’s multimedia brand created to inform, inspire, and empower the Philippine startups; micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs); and future business leaders. This section will be published every other Monday. For pitches and releases about startups, e-mail to bmbeltran@bworldonline.com (cc: abconoza@bworldonline.com). Materials sent become BW property.

Aboitiz endowment continues to support next generation of Filipino tech leaders

The Aboitiz Group’s $10-million endowment to the Asian Institute of Management (AIM) has helped open pathways for hundreds of Filipinos to pursue advanced careers in technology and data science, demonstrating how long-term investments in people can shape leadership and national capability over time.

Established to commemorate the Group’s centennial in 2020, the endowment funded the creation of the Aboitiz School of Innovation, Technology, and Entrepreneurship (ASITE), with academic programs focused on developing leaders who understand technology and its impact on business, governance, and society.

A core part of the endowment is the Aboitiz Student Loan Fund, which has disbursed $4.6 million in interest-free loans since 2021, enabling students to pursue graduate degrees in Data Science, Data Analytics, and Innovation and Business. Some graduates have joined companies within the Aboitiz Group, while others are contributing to organizations vital to national development such as banks, energy companies, hospitals, and startups.

The endowment also strengthened AIM’s learning environment through the Aboitiz Tech Space, a modern, technology-enabled classroom designed for hybrid learning, executive education, and academic convenings. The space continues to support collaboration among students, faculty, and partners, linking classroom learning with real-world application.

Beyond teaching, ASITE faculty and students have produced research addressing practical challenges in healthcare, education, sustainability, and governance, helping translate data and artificial intelligence into solutions that serve institutions and communities.

Over the past years, Aboitiz’s endowment to AIM has expanded access to advanced education, strengthened applied research, and helped develop leaders who can drive innovation and change.

Through ASITE, Aboitiz is making a long-term commitment to Filipino talent, advancing technology and shaping leaders whose work will strengthen institutions and contribute to inclusive growth in the Philippines and beyond.

 


SparkUp is BusinessWorld’s multimedia brand created to inform, inspire, and empower the Philippine startups; micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs); and future business leaders. This section will be published every other Monday. For pitches and releases about startups, e-mail to bmbeltran@bworldonline.com (cc: abconoza@bworldonline.com). Materials sent become BW property.

ERC sets maximum allowable revenue for NGCP at P376.4B

BW FILE PHOTO

THE ENERGY Regulatory Commission (ERC) has set the maximum allowable revenue (MAR) of the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) at P376.4 billion for the fifth regulatory period (5RP), covering 2023 to 2027.

In a decision promulgated on Jan. 30, the ERC completed the review of NGCP’s 5RP application, marking the regulatory reset for the period without further delay.

The approved MAR, however, is lower than the annual revenue requirement (ARR) proposed by NGCP, which was P442.6 billion.

MAR refers to the revenue ceiling that the ERC allows the utility to collect, while ARR represents the amount NGCP needs to recover its costs and expenses.

The ERC approved the following MAR for each year of the 5RP: P63.4 billion for 2023, P69.1 billion for 2024, P74.3 billion for 2025, P81 billion for 2026, and P88.5 billion for 2027.

For 2023, NGCP is directed to implement the MAR starting Aug. 1, 2026, until further notice.

In issuing the decision, the ERC said it considered NGCP’s submissions, inputs from intervenors and other stakeholders, recommendations from ERC technical consultants, and its own independent evaluation of the record.

The regulator said the decision follows “the principles of transparency, reasonableness, and prudence in cost recovery, and is consistent with the ERC’s statutory mandate to protect the public interest.”

Under the Electric Power Industry Reform Act, the ERC is tasked with setting transmission and distribution wheeling rates that allow utilities to recover “just and reasonable costs and a reasonable return on rate base,” ensuring the entity can operate viably.

The rate-reset process is a forward-looking exercise that requires the utility to submit projected expenditures and planned projects over a five-year regulatory period.

The ERC then assesses past performance and adjusts rates as needed. Since part of the 5RP has already lapsed, the commission used actual and historical data from NGCP, supplemented with forecast information.

Last year, the regulator completed NGCP’s 4RP, approving a MAR of P335.78 billion for the period covering 2016 to 2022.

This resulted in a cost recovery of P28.29 billion from consumers over a seven-year period, translating to an increase of P0.1013 per kilowatt-hour in transmission charges. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

T-bill, bond rates may drop on BSP cut hopes

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RATES of Treasury bills (T-bills) and Treasury bonds (T-bonds) on offer this week could go down to track secondary market movements amid hopes for further monetary easing, even with players expected to take positions before an upcoming offering of new 10-year benchmark notes.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) will auction off P27 billion in T-bills on Monday, or P9 billion each in 91-, 182-, and 364-day papers.

On Tuesday, the government will offer P30 billion in reissued 10-year T-bonds with a remaining life of seven years and six months.

T-bill and T-bond yields could mirror the week-on-week decline seen at the secondary market as the market still expects a sixth straight cut from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) next week despite faster January inflation, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

A trader said the reissued T-bonds to be auctioned off on Tuesday could fetch rates from 5.875% to 5.925% as players may be on the defensive before the jumbo 10-year bond issuance next week.

The government is looking to raise at least P30 billion through fresh 10-year benchmark bonds. The rate-setting auction will be on Feb. 18, with the public offer period set to run until Feb. 20.

At the secondary market on Friday, yields on the 91-, 182-, and 364-day T-bills fell by 11.21 basis points (bps), 8.98 bps, and 10.38 bps week on week to end at 4.5705%, 4.6827%, and 4.7374%, respectively, based on PHP Bloomberg Valuation Service Reference Rates data as of Feb. 6 published on the Philippine Dealing System’s website.

For its part, the yield on the 10-year bond dropped by 2.7 bps week on week to close at 5.9598%, while the seven-year paper, the tenor closest to the remaining life of the papers on offer this week, saw its rate go down by 5.17 bps to 5.8032%.

Headline inflation rose to 2% in January from 1.8% in December, but slowed from the 2.9% in the same month last year. This was the fastest print in 11 months or since 2.1% in February 2025.

This was within the BSP’s 1.4% to 2.2% estimate for the month, but was faster than the 1.8% median forecast in a BusinessWorld survey of 18 economists.

BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. earlier said that a rate cut is possible at the Monetary Board’s Feb. 19 meeting if they see the need to support domestic demand, especially after economic growth hit a five-year low last year due to the ongoing fallout from a corruption scandal that stalled both public and private spending.

However, the central bank last week again signaled an imminent end to its current easing cycle. The Monetary Board has slashed benchmark borrowing costs by 200 bps since August 2024, bringing the policy rate to 4.5%.

Last week, the Treasury raised P37.8 billion via the T-bills it auctioned off, higher than the P27-billion plan as the offer was oversubscribed, with total tenders reaching P176.819 billion. This prompted the Auction Committee to double its acceptance of noncompetitive bids for all tenors to P7.2 billion each.

The government awarded P12.6 billion in 91-day T-bills, above the P9-billion plan, as demand for the tenor reached P62.111 billion. The three-month paper fetched an average rate of 4.579%, down by 8.7 bps from the previous week. Yields accepted ranged from 4.548% to 4.593%.

The Treasury also borrowed P12.6 billion via the 182-day debt versus the P9-billion program as tenders hit P59.818 billion. The average rate of the six-month T-bill was at 4.672%, easing by 7.9 bps week on week. Tenders awarded carried yields from 4.63% to 4.7%.

Lastly, the BTr raised P12.6 billion from the 364-day securities, more than the P9-billion plan, as bids totaled P54.89 billion. The one-year paper’s average yield was at 4.689%, falling by 13.8 bps. Accepted rates were from 4.67% to 4.735%.

Meanwhile, the reissued 10-year T-bonds to be offered on Tuesday were last auctioned off on Dec. 5, 2023, where the government raised P20 billion as planned at an average rate of 6.224%, below the 6.625% coupon rate.

The BTr wants to raise P308 billion from the domestic market this month, or P108 billion via T-bills and up to P200 billion through T-bonds.

The government borrows from local and foreign sources to help fund its budget deficit, which is capped at P1.647 trillion or 5.3% of gross domestic product this year. — A.M.C. Sy

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