‘As gov’t payroll surges to P1.4T, rightsizing should plug lack in critical personnel’
Press Release
26 July 2022
‘As gov’t payroll surges to P1.4T, rightsizing should plug lack in critical personnel’
The plan to “right size” the bureaucracy will not slash the number of national government workers as the hiring of essential personnel, such as teachers and nurses, are dictated by population increase, Batangas Rep. Ralph Recto said.
“Rightsizing would mean downsizing the personnel complement in some agencies but upsizing them in many,” he said.
He said “population growth is the most influential HR (human resources) recruiter, one that is impossible to ignore.”
He said a mere 1,000 increase in the country’s population also triggers the hiring of one policeman and one nurse.
“And how many people are born in this country every 24 hours? About 3,838. So every six hours, we have to, ideally, recruit one policeman and one nurse,” Recto said, citing the “suitable” 1:1000 personnel-to-population ratio for the two professions.
The country’s population, the 13th biggest in the world, increased by 1.4 million from 2020 to 2021.
Recto said a conservative 300,000 increase in annual public school enrollment requires the hiring of 7,500 teachers.
“Plus you build the equal number of classrooms,” he added.
He said babies born in a span of 15 minutes today would show up at the gates of public schools six years later to occupy one classroom.
Recto said the “right” rightsizing project should be driven by the mission to boost government service and not merely to cut payroll expense.
“The idea is scrap unnecessary positions and use them to create essential ones, or use the savings from abolished items to fill the shortage of critical workforce,” he said.
He said government is grappling with lack of personnel on two fronts: health, and science and engineering.
The country has a shortage of 92,000 doctors, 44,000 nurses and 19,000 medical technologists, Recto said, citing a Health official’s recent testimony before the Senate.
“Yung kakulangan natin ng engineers, technical and science people ay ang ‘technical deficit’ na nagpapabagal ng ating infrastructure at ibang science-driven modernization projects,”Recto said.
Recto said government’s “personnel service” or PS expenses, have quietly crept from P593 billion in 2012 to P1.405 trillion this year, a 137% surge in 10 years.
Taxpayers are shelling out P3.850 billion daily for the salary and allowances of national government personnel and the pension of retired servicemen.
“Sabihin na natin na may matitipid sa rightsizing na P20 billion a year. Maaaring maliit ito kung ihahambing sa P1.4 trillion na taunang PS expense. Pero maraming medical personnel na pwedeng i-hire. That is why I support this kind of rightsizing,” he said.