Profiles of some Filipino homeworkers also illustrate the real situation
facing them in the Philippine setting.
Ka Lilay weaves sawali or palm leaves for a subcontractor in her
village in the Philippines. She buys palm leaves and bamboo from a
local farmer. The bamboo is cut into long strips with sharp knives
and Ka Lilay then weaves them into rectangular mats according to specifications
provided by the subcontractor. Sometimes the subcontractor refuses
to pay her, saying the mats are not of the required quality (but taking
them anyway). Then Ka Lilay loses not only her earnings from the weaving,
but also her investment in the raw materials. But there is nothing
she can.
Intense trade liberalization and tariff reduction thrusts adopted
by countries like the Philippines under the General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT), Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), ASEAN
Free Trade Agreement (AFTA) and similar trade accords associated with
globalization have brought about stiff competition in the world export
market.
Today, despite the devaluation of the peso, the country has become
even less a major player in the export market. Among the biggest export
losers is the garments industry, which is the biggest employer of
women workers. As a result, garments and textile firms have been forced
to either shut down or lower costs by laying off workers, reducing
the number of regular employees, and using more contractual or subcontracted
workers who have less or no privileges and benefits.
Globalization has also meant the coming of computer-controlled technology
in many sectors. Home-based embroidery workers are among those who
have been displaced by this trend which means that the work they used
to do is now done in small factories by computer-aided machinery which
can turn out products of consistent high quality at a very much faster
rate.
Maria, a subcontracted homebased worker belonging to the PATAMABA
chapter in Malibong Bata, Pandi, Bulacan, says embroidery work was
a good source of livelihood from the 1980s to the early nineties.
But in the years 1996-97, orders for embroidery started to dwindle.
If before, her income from embroidery could suffice, today, there
are more times when she has no orders than when she has. Because of
this, she thinks that subcontracting will eventually disappear. Before,
after getting her wages, she could still go to the market. Today,
she just goes to the corner store for their household needs because
the market is far and the cost of transportation is high. She and
her children also plant vegetables. They dug up a small fishpond and
started to raise some tilapia.
She can no longer attend village occasions because of the expensive
custom of gift-giving. She just fulfills unavoidable obligations such
as going to funerals. During Christmastime, only the children get
to have new clothes. Her eldest daughter stopped schooling to work
in a store and help earn an income for the family.
Maria is just one out of many homeworkers in her village who are
suffering from dwindling embroidery orders, according to a study done
through the auspices of the University of the Philippines Center for
Women's Studies. Consequently, these homeworkers, already saddled
with a variety of debts to their cooperative and other credit sources,
have shifted to other means of livelihood (e.g., hog-and quail-raising
which are now affected by high cost of feeds and other inputs), or
have migrated to other