Monday, October 22, 2012

Ticking timebomb on Philippine tourism? Outflow of talents to overseas jobs a threat to our tourism? POLITICOS, WAKE UP!



(Image above from Mami and Family blog)


One of the negative as well as unexamined aspects of the overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) phenomenon is the huge drain of talents, valuable human resources out of the Philippines.

This latest news report of Bloomberg highlights this potential problem even more, especially for our potential sunrise industry of tourism. What about the OFW phenomenon's dire effects on the Philippine medical care industry, our hospitals and medical centers?

What are our politicians doing or going to do to address these serious challenges, if any?

The OFW phenomenon also has its many other huge and often unquantified social costs.

I am not against the OFW phenomenon per se, for it liberates many of the hardworking people in the Philippines from the bad working conditions and lack of economic opportunities here. However, my question is this---when shall our political leaders really plan for developing more of our local industries with our human resources and talents, by wooing in more investors?



(Image above from the Definitely Filipino blog)



Read the news report below, in order to be more disturbed, if not alarmed:


(Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc., owner of the luxury St. Regis and W brands, will open a new hotel once every two weeks in China this year and next, CEO Frits van Paasschen said in a Bloomberg Television interview in September 2012. Picture below is by photographer: Kevin Lee/Bloomberg)

Pan Pacific Says Staff Shortage Threat to Hotels: Southeast Asia

 

Pan Pacific CEO Says Staff Shortage Threat to Asia Hotels


Pan Pacific Hotels Group Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Patrick Imbardelli said retaining employees in markets including Bali, Myanmar and Manila is the Asian hospitality industry’s greatest challenge.

Competition among hotel operators, workers choosing to seek jobs overseas and a lack of suitably trained employees have contributed to the shortage, Imbardelli said. The industry also loses workers to banks, insurance companies and airlines, which are focusing more on service and presentation, he said.

The single biggest challenge we have is the talent crunch,” Imbardelli said in an interview in Singapore on Oct. 19. The shortage is across the board, from front-office managers to top management, he said.

(Photo of the Pan Pacific Hotel in Singapore)



Pan Pacific, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. and Marriott International Inc. are among chains building more hotels in Asia as travel to the region increases. More hotels and a lack of experienced workers for the industry is “a big squeeze on profitability,” said Robert Hecker, Singapore-based managing director of Horwath HTL Asia Pacific.

Hotels in Asia will have to spend more money on marketing to attract new workers and take on the costs of training them, Hecker said.

“There is a huge pipeline of new hotels,” Hecker said. “It probably means that market occupancies are going to be coming down because supply is increasing faster than demand, so that puts a crunch on the revenue side, combined with increasing costs to staff.”

(Photo of Singapore Marriott Hotel)


‘Huge Outflux’

Pan Pacific, controlled by Singapore billionaire Wee Cho Yaw’s UOL Group Ltd., was unchanged at S$2.26 at the close in Singapore. The stock has advanced 22 percent this year and the parent company has gained 45 percent, surpassing the 15 percent increase in Singapore’s Straits Times Index.

Manila sees a “huge outflux of people” for jobs overseas, Imbardelli said. In Bali, independent hotels and villas compete with established chains for workers, while Myanmar’s nascent travel market lacks experienced employees, he said.

(Photo of Pan Pacific Hotel Manila in the Malate district, Manila City, the Philippines)



Pan Pacific owns about 30 hotels, resorts and serviced apartments globally. In Singapore, where the group has eight properties including those under its Park Royal brand, the government’s tightening of rules on foreign workers has hurt the industry’s ability to hire more workers, Imbardelli said.

More Expensive

The island city has made it more expensive for companies to hire overseas workers by raising levies, and in the past year it has increased salary thresholds and required better educational qualifications for some categories of foreigners.

After a recent S$100 million refurbishment, Pan Pacific Singapore had to open restaurants and bars in stages due to a lack of staff, Imbardelli said.

Pan Pacific is conducting more training to retain workers, “creating roles around people for them to learn,” Imbardelli said. There is “a lot more focus on succession planning, a lot more focus on developing the people,” he said.

(Photo of the Hai Tien Lo Chinese Restaurant of Pan Pacific Hotel Singapore)




Pan Pacific is focusing its expansion in Asia, he said. The region’s carriers flew 7.9 percent more passengers on international flights in the first eight months of this year, according to the Association of Asia Pacific Airlines. Growth in Asian economies is still encouraging both business and leisure travel in the region, the association said last month.

Asia’s travel is growing at a faster rate than ever before, the one region that grew so much over the past 10 years and continues to grow,” Imbardelli said.

Starwood, Marriott

Starwood, owner of the luxury St. Regis and W brands, will open a new hotel once every two weeks in China this year and next, CEO Frits van Paasschen said in a Bloomberg Television interview in September. Starwood will have 320 hotels in Asia by 2014, according to a Sept. 20 statement.

(Photo of interior of St. Regis Hotel Beijing in China)




(Picture of W Hotel Hong Kong)




Marriott, the largest publicly traded U.S. hotel chain, plans to add about 110 hotels in the region, which Chairman Bill Marriott said in a June interview is a bright spot that “continues to boom.”

Half of Pan Pacific’s properties in Asia are owned by the hotel. The company plans to cut the proportion and manage more hotels than it owns in future, Imbardelli said, without giving a timeframe. “There are people who like our brands and want to invest behind the brands,” he said.

(Photo inside Pan Pacific Hotel Bangkok in Thailand)



Pan Pacific added an average of four to six hotels a year and would like to continue at the same rate globally in the “mid-term,” Imbardelli said. The chain runs a Park Royal hotel in Yangon and Pan Pacific properties in Manila and Bali.

The group has two hotels under construction in Singapore and three in China, he said, which will be completed in the next six months.

“The hotels will proceed because the labor staffing is not a consideration at that point and they will find a way, effectively, to deal with that crunch,” Hecker said. “I don’t think labor will slow down hotel growth.”

(Photo of Grand Plaza Park Royal Hotel in Yangon, Myanmar)

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