Space Industry and Business News  
Philippines fears 60,000 IT job losses after Intel shutdown

Intel was once one of the biggest exporters in the Philippines and one of the first to set up semiconductor manufacturing facilities in there 35 years ago, investing about a billion dollars over that time, according to its website.
by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) Jan 22, 2009
Up to 60,000 jobs could be lost in the Philippines' key electronics sector after Intel Corp. shut a facility and Texas Instruments announced a number of lay-offs, an official said Thursday.

Intel, the world's biggest computer chip maker, announced plans Wednesday to close plants in Malaysia, the Philippines and the United States, with the loss of 1,800 jobs in its assembly test facility in Cavite province south of Manila.

Texas Instruments, another big US player in the sector, told the government last month it was laying off 400 workers from its semiconductor factory in the northern resort town of Baguio due to the global financial crisis.

The cuts highlight the poor state of the electronics industry and could be the beginning of a wave of job losses in the sector.

"The impact of the economic downturn on our business was more severe than we anticipated and the outlook is uncertain," Intel Philippines said in a statement explaining the closure of its facility.

The laid-off employees "will be offered a severance package," and various "transition services" the company statement said without giving details.

Intel was once one of the biggest exporters in the Philippines and one of the first to set up semiconductor manufacturing facilities in there 35 years ago, investing about a billion dollars over that time, according to its website.

"The semiconductor industry is already getting hit," Labour Secretary Marianito Roque told ABS-CBN television in an interview.

"We have seen this as early as three months ago," he said.

"We expected that we'll be getting hit in the first semester of this year," he added.

Roque said the government is giving counselling and retraining to "about 60,000 workers that could be affected nationwide".

The labour department is "getting daily notices now not only of retrenchments but on the reduction of work shifts, reduction of working hours, and compression of the work week," he said.

Plants employing 19,000 people have so far reduced shifts or working hours, he added but did not say how many had been laid off.

"We have to admit that this is not business as usual in the Philippines for the electronics sector and in the garments sector as well," Roque said.

"These will be the two particular areas that would be affected by the global financial crisis."

The electronics sector accounts for about 70 percent of the Philippines' exports and employs 480,000 workers.

Roque said Manila expects the business process outsourcing sector to take up some of the slack, with a "nominal growth" in the call centre industry creating about 130,000 jobs this year.

The Philippines also hopes to send its workers to "hotel jobs in Bulgaria and even manufacturing jobs also in some countries like Australia."

Related Links
The Economy



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


World crisis deepens as downturn bites in Asia
Beijing (AFP) Jan 22, 2009
Grim economic news from China and Japan showed the global crisis hitting ever harder Thursday, burning Asia's champion exporters while data from the United States signalled more pain to come.







  • Google Slashes Costs Boosts Profits; Microsoft Fires And Yahoo Freezes
  • China wary about the power of netizens in 2009: analysts
  • Autodesk exec Carol Bartz to become Yahoo! CEO: WSJ
  • Experience High-Speed Data Communications With ThurayaIP

  • Japan Launches Satellite To Track Greenhouse Gases
  • Japan Resets H2A Launch To Jan 23
  • First ULA Delta IV Heavy NRO Mission Successfully Lifts Off From Cape Canaveral
  • New Skies NSS-9 Satellite Arrives In Kourou For February 12 Launch

  • New Turbines Can Cut Fuel Consumption For Business Jets
  • Air China expects to post 'significant loss' for 2008
  • Nations demand climate plan from air, maritime industries
  • Heathrow expansion to get green light despite protests: reports

  • TSAT Set To Speed Up Data Rates Across The Air Force
  • Increasing Joint Battlefield Operation Effectiveness
  • Australia Chips In A Spare Quarter For Boeing Wideband Global SATCOM Bird
  • Boeing Completes Critical Design Review For FAB-T Software-Defined Radio

  • Heating Up Gold To Surprising Effect: It Gets Harder Not Softer
  • Next Generation Cloaking Device Demonstrated
  • Raytheon Sensor Passes Space Simulation Test
  • Lockheed Martin Begins Key Test Of First SBIRS Geo Satellite With New Flight Software

  • Stevens New Director Of Communications And Public Outreach For Space Foundation
  • ATK Appoints Blake Larson To Lead Space Systems Group
  • Berndt Feuerbacher New President Of IAU
  • Orbital Appoints Frank Culbertson And Mark Pieczynski To Management

  • Advanced Polar Operational Environmental Satellite Ready For Launch
  • ABB Interferometer To Blast Into Space Aboard The IBUKI (GOSAT) Satellite
  • GeoEye-1 Earth Imaging Satellite Captures Inaugural Celebration From Space
  • First Global Hawk Unmanned System For Environmental Science Research

  • Garmins nuvi 885T Combines Most Popular Features
  • Cobra's 2009 Radar Detectors
  • NAVIGON Expands Pool Of Downloadable Content For Its GPS Navigators
  • GPS OCX Team Reviews GPS Control Segment

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement