Misery Called Life wrote:BlackburnRovers wrote:Ok, I will be the first to admit that the Filipino workers here are generally good in customer service or hospitality roles. At the same time, they are not good (at least the ones here) in business or entrepreneurial stuff. How many Filipino owned businesses do we see ?
Precisely. I can't phantom how by restricting themselves to a handful of industries, their numbers here in the UAE are so huge.
If they were well spread out accross all sectors then I would'nt raise eyebrows.
The impact of the recssion should have had a direct impact on their numbers. Which I don't think have fallen all that much. So either my estimation is wrong, or we have no recession or .............????
They have pretty much reframed the expatriate distribution here and I'm tryin to figure out how.
In customer service I'm quite fine when dealing with a Filipino, without doubt they bring goodwill to acompany. Efficieny? Naa....I don't agree.
But you can't slight their work ethic though. No doubt bout that!
Hey Farthest point ur damn on target bout IT. Thats one sector which historically belonged to Indians and Pakistanis as a majority. Now it's become extremely competitive. I had a friend from the Phillipines who owed that to the governments excellent training programs.
That's right. With the recession, percentage-wise, the number of Filipinos who lost their jobs (and never found a replacement) is low.
The reason I could think of for this matter is that Salary / Quality ratio is that of the traditional way of running a business (in a business fair sense of the word). It is just "right" to say the least.
What I mean by that is, if a Filipino works say as a waiter/waitress and they earn AED 1,500.00 with free accommodation, food, uniforms plus tips. Without consideration for the high speculation of the cost of living (as they are only slightly affected because they have a company provided accommodation), I would say in a manager/business owner point of view, that salary is fair.
In comparison say to another nationality that need to be paid AED 3,000.00 for the same job, then a traditional business owner would therefore opt for the Filipino one if nationality doesn't matter (i.e. it is not an Arabic restaurant that needs Arabic speaking person).
The same goes for the higher level jobs be it IT / Managerial Post / Accountants etc.
If I am a traditional business owner which doesn't like to take bad risks for my business, I could run a business in a secure and low risk way by putting forward a decision that is similar to this.
Why would I pay higher if I will get the job done right (without being unfair) for a more economical option?