- Filipino 'niceness' - Really they are only nice as long as you are nice to them. You are nice back because they expect you to be nice. And you are nice because you have no reason not to be nice. You even remain nice (as a foreigner) when they invite you into your home, not because you are not nice, but because you don't trust their niceness. You don't want to offend them right? Understandably because if you offend a Filipino, you are in trouble. They are very proud of their 'goodness', to the point of arrogance. Never show that side of them...as they can be very vindictive, and the police in the Philippines are next to useless, so you don't want to give them cause for a grievance.
- Being nice - We have hence realised that being nice is simply not confronting people with expectations or conflicting values. Basically its about talking about frivolous stuff like the weather or sweat foods, or boyfriends, whilst not imposing any expectations that are likely to create conflict. This is why the Filipino is so nice and relaxed. They are mostly poor, and they are surrounded by people who share their poverty. If they are not poor, they are happy because they feel great they are not poor, and they in the last 10-15 years have had the opportunity to experience some aspiration.
- Original Sin - Filipinos accept this notion of Original Sin, so they pray a lot when they do something wrong, but it seems they can't rehabilitate or 'self-treat' because they are often dishonest. Middle class people will say that its because they are 'poor', but its actually not that. Being poor is not a reason for crime or unethical thinking, at least not in the Philippines where destitution is not so bad. There is actually plenty of food in the Philippines. People live in ghettos for a chance at aspiration, not because they are poor. They moved to the city to get rich, not to survive. They aspired for more; the problem is they did not know how to do it, or to get it. It is easier for a Christian to look down upon themselves and their fellow man, because its the ultimate acceptance of one's flaws. It is an act of self-contempt.
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Monday, November 11, 2013
The pride of the Filipino - the delusion behind Tacloban storm surge
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Labels: Education, Natural disasters, Philippine Values, Philosophy, Religion, Science
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Business outsourcing and creation in the Philippines
The Philippines has a strategic advantage in the call centre/ business outsourcing arena. How long is it going to last. This is an interesting question. I would suggest it will sustain itself because people as they are educated and wealthier are opting for those resources which will bring them into the global market. Consider the following:
1. University influence - At the moment the people showing the most commercial acumen are those who are going to those ivy league universities or who have professional or business-owning parents. This list of people is growing
2. External role models - Teachers are often not good role models since most of them are unthinking, unchallenged bureaucrats; however the expatriate uncles and brothers often are, and often willing to finance opportunities which they bring to the family.
3. Investment propensity - There is a lack of places to invest in the Philippines. People are more likely to invest in their brothers job than buy investments like land and stocks. You can't trust stocks, and many families are divesting under-utilised land rather than buying it. This does not make land a bad investment (in the right area), but it does convey that Philippines, even if they are asset-rich, are cash-poor.
4. Disparity of opportunity - There is a strong distinction to make between those working in the global economy and those stuck in the domestic economy. Many foreigners come in and attempt to build businesses in the low-end market because its big. The problem is that they have no value proposition beyond their 'great idea'. The problem is that their idea is so easily copied, so they make the mistake of entering an arena where the barriers to entry are low.
The Philippines is a land of opportunity....just choose your vocation wisely. See our blog post on the global dynamics of outsourcing and offshoring.
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Labels: Business Outsourcing, Education, Offshoring, Philippine jobs
Friday, March 12, 2010
Education - a barrier to Philippines development
The social context in which kids participate is no better. If kids talk about serious conceptual issues with their children, then they will carry these ideas into the playground. If that education is lacking from amongst the majority of kids, then they will either be alienated for such talk, or they will drift into groups whom they can more comfortably relate. If there is no such group, they are unlikely to develop those skills, unless they are lucky enough to find the company of adults who support them.
From the perspective of formal education, the big problem is the nation's teachers are not particularly well-trained, and the students lack structure and general knowledge. This is going to slow the pace of learning. More particularly it is going to kinder more conceptual development. Abstract and critical thinking skills which play a big part in developing Western education are largely absence. They are not too prevalent in Western cultures either, but in Asia, they are essentially absent.
This is precisely the reason why Asia needs to introduce Western educational standards, and yet in the Philippines the constitution prevents Western interests from participating in education; at least from an equity standpoint. This fact poses a great opportunity cost to Filipinos in several respects:
1. The best and brightest in the Philippines are being denied the opportunity to fully develop their minds. In addition they are made to feel inadequate when they achieve degrees in engineering in the Philippines, then realise their general knowledge is below some technician from a Western nation. They suffer the indignity of having to ask the technician how to do their job, even though they might be getting paid more. They get these jobs in the West only because they are very cheap labour, because there is a skills shortage, or no one will live in the conditions they are willing to tolerate.
2. There are a great many students in Asia (i.e. Not just the Philippines) who go to Western countries looking for a better quality of education. If they take these opportunities, they are less likely to go back to the Philippines.
The implication is that the Philippines is denied better educational standards which would otherwise give their people a better opportunity to earn more money and achieve higher levels of productivity. They are also being negatively impacted in terms of personal or cognitive development, such that when they step out of their 'deprived nation' they are made to feel inadequate or unprepared for their shame of not being given the best chance for success. This is an unnecessary state of affairs, and it is just one of the reasons why the Philippines Constitution needs to be repealed, and a more appropriate framework for personal development established.
Another silly provision in the constitution prevents foreigners from investing in land in the Philippines. As a result, Filipino pastures go under-utilised, development opportunities are overlooked and Filipinos who remain under-employed or unemployed grow impatient waiting for their opportunity. The Philippines as a result has high levels of alcoholism and simply low productivity since many are not raised in a culture where they have had to work.
Andrew Sheldon
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Labels: Education, philippine politics