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WORKERS Cristina de Borja (left) and her cousin Bernadette Cortas are back in their small apartment holding a demand letter from a moneylender. AFP





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Laid-off OFWs in Taiwan are poor again


Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 00:59:00 12/26/2008

Filed Under: Overseas Employment, World Financial Crisis, Poverty, Unemployment

ANGONO, RIZAL?Americans were already defaulting on home payments when Gertrudes Capili mortgaged her modest farm near Manila to help send her two granddaughters to Taiwan.

There, Bernadette Cortas and her cousin Cristina de Borja worked in a factory making microchips for appliances sold to an American consumer market on the verge of collapse.

Little did the 90-year-old grandmother know that the US subprime meltdown and subsequent financial crisis would come home to roost in Angono, a lakeshore town east of Manila where she lives with a daughter and the two granddaughters in a cramped 34-square-meter home made of plywood and galvanized iron sheets.

A nearby river often overflows and floods the ground floor in the rain, and the warped furniture, bought with the granddaughters? earnings, has to be replaced every year.

?Huge debts and a splitting headache,? 24-year-old Cortas told Agence France-Presse when asked what she had earned from her stint at the ASE semiconductor factory near Taipei, which serves electronics giants such as Motorola and Epson.

Both she and De Borja, 30, now wear horn-rimmed glasses?the result of working long hours in front of tiny circuit boards.

Just eight months after the cousins got their jobs, which netted them about 20,000 Taiwan dollars (P28,800) a month after food and lodging expenses, they were shipped back home along with 103 other Filipinos as the company cut staff amid plunging global electronics demand.

Poster child

Cortas would be an apt poster child of the Philippines? economic diaspora.

Once a giggly, leggy teenage schoolgirl, she is now a college dropout who had worked in a fast-food restaurant to put herself through high school.

The eldest of five children of an unemployed bus driver who lives with another woman, Cortas single-handedly fed, housed and put her siblings through school.

Her mother works as a maid in Saudi Arabia but has a new boyfriend and no longer sends money to the family, Cortas said.

When Cortas lost her job in Taiwan, her siblings also had to quit school.

Now jobless, penniless and deep in debt, she is staring at a bleak holiday season, unable to pay back the P50,000-loan she and De Borja had secured with their grandmother?s 2,000-square-meter farm as collateral.

The loan covered only part of their ?job placement fees? of P85,000 each, which was mainly paid for by commercial money lenders that charge interest rates of 2 percent a month.

Cortas did not even have money to go home to Rosario town south of Manila for Christmas, and is temporarily staying at her grandmother?s.

Her and De Borja?s desperation saw them line up overnight outside a Manila television station last weekend for a game show that offered a house and P1 million in prizes.

Both missed out because ?they appeared to favor domestic helpers,? De Borja said.

8M OFWs

The cousins are just two of some eight million Filipinos?10 percent of the population?who have joined an economic diaspora.

The government says several hundred overseas Filipino workers have lost their jobs due to the global crisis, which, according to the International Labor Organization, could see as many as 20 million people put out of work by the end of 2009.

Cortas and De Borja have filed a suit to get a refund of part of their placement fee, which had guaranteed them contracts for two years in Taiwan.

While no one can be jailed in the Philippines for failing to pay a debt, they need to repay the loans to avoid becoming blacklisted by labor recruiters.

De Borja, a former pharmaceutical company worker in Manila, said a job in the Philippines was not appealing because of the low pay.

Two in five Filipinos live on $2 or less a day, and a third of the labor force is either out of work or underemployed at any one time.

De Borja said she had pawned or sold most of her jewelry to try and pare down debts.

The Taiwan job helped tide things over before the subprime crisis blew up early this year. The cousins worked seven days a week and padded their wages with overtime.

But the factory stopped the extra shifts in June, and by September, as electronics demand plummeted, their take-home pay was down to about 2,000 Taiwan dollars (P2,880) a month.

De Borja?s younger sister has since left for Dubai to work as a shopping mall clerk.

President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo received the laid-off chip workers in Malacañang three days after they flew home on Dec. 2.

But real help was apparently not forthcoming.

?It was obvious that her smile was faked. It was plastered on her mug,? De Borja said.

?Plastic,? Cortas agreed.

Agence France-Presse


Copyright 2011 Philippine Daily Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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