Sunday, April 22, 2012



 This is where I based my personal reaction below. . 

      

WHAT IS DONE AND WHAT IS GONE...
( A personal reaction )
             I have been in the struggle to construe the thought of the figures such as numbers and percentage to words and vice versa. But the approach of this article doesn’t bother me much in interpreting the thought of numbers to words. What the figures are telling us is that a massive number in the Philippine population is unemployed, that’s it. In every issue there will always be two sides, the positive side and the negative side. Well I’ll try to converse to what I see is a rare positive side of this issue. I could only think of one positive thing in the reflection of this issue which requires one to extend beyond the horizon of his or her way of thinking. The information itself is a positive one. I haven’t recognized the voice of this article to be sarcastic. It’s an information drive instead. To discourage is not the purpose yet to be well – informed of how the employment rate in the Philippines takes its own bumpy route.
                All of the figures being shown in the article were based from the surveys being conducted by well respected SWS polls and surveys. In short it is accurate and credible, isn’t it? Considering the credibility of these polls and surveys, it saddened me as a student and a future job seeker. Much more than the sadness is the fear to face the possibility to be part of the 9.7 million unemployed Filipinos. Can we consider government corruption as an element of existence in this unemployment issue? A YES is not hard to say right? The government can provide jobs; they have the means to do it. The means are still to be done but the budgets are already gone, that’s a fact. How come that those who have a bachelor degree, at least, can’t find a job where there are companies that only require a high school degree. The reason of this paradox may pin point to our corrupt government officials. Supposedly the higher the degree of a person is having, he or she is entitled for a higher salary if employed compared to those who only gain the minimum salary amount; that is according to my own logic. The logic that I have just presented may have seen by the corrupt minds of some government officials. Why keep on hiring those people that requires you to pay a higher salary rate if you can hire those people of a low salary rate. They are not after of the development of our country, it is them and their assets to be developed first. 
            Well for some private companies, fortunately, are not thinking that way. My point is, if the percentage of the corruption in the Philippines will get low then the unemployment rate will get low as well. If i would share my view especially in the way/s to make the unemployment rate’s percentage get low, I could only advocate the honesty and loyalty as far as our government officials and the employers are concern. What is yet to be done is the government’s beneficial use of their power and what is already gone is the money and the budget itself.