By JANESS ANN J. ELLAO
 Bulatlat.com
Aiza Padilla, 21, endured the scorching heat of the sun and her  grumbling empty stomach as she walked from one building to another along  the business district of Makati City. She had just graduated a few  weeks ago but she is already in a hurry to look for a job.
“I feel that it is my responsibility to my parents and siblings to  find a good job as a form of gratitude for sending me to school,”  Padilla told Bulatlat.
Padilla was born in Balayan, Batangas but lived with her sister in  Tondo, Manila after she graduated from high school. Her elder sisters  sent her to college and on March 21, Padilla graduated from Wesleyan  College in Manila.
“Costly,” she replied when asked to describe how her job hunting has  been.  She explained that sometimes she has to choose between buying  something to eat or skipping lunch to be able to save money for printing  her resume’ and reproducing her pictures for her application.
“I want to apply to as many companies as I can. But most of the  time, I do not have money for fare,” she said.
Padilla is not alone in experiencing difficulties in job hunting.
7 out of 10 Graduates would be Jobless
A recent study conducted by Ibon Foundation, an independent  think-tank, revealed that only three out of ten college graduates who  would enter the labor force this year could land a job. This means that  seven out of 10 fresh graduates would enter the ranks of the unemployed  this year.
With 542,000 college students graduating this year, according to  statistics from the Commission on Higher Education, and six out of ten  graduates immediately joining the labor force, based on trends in the  previous years, there would be 325,000 new college graduates who would  be looking for work this year. Adding the 325,000 new job seekers to the  523,000 unemployed graduates as of January 2010 would result in 848,000  new and old college graduates competing for available jobs,” the report  said.
Assuming that the trend in job generation would be constant, another  256,000 new jobs would be available for college graduates this year –  the same as that of April last year, which was based on the Labor Force  Survey of the National Statistics Office. Thus, 592,000 college  graduates, both old and new, would end up jobless.
“That’s sad,” Padilla said when Bulatlat told her about the recent  study conducted by Ibon.  She said she pity all the parents who work so  hard to be able to send their children to college. Padilla said her  parents and siblings worked hard and scrimped on expenses to save money  for her tuition, thinking that a college degree would be her ticket to a  stable job. “But with this study, it seems that a college degree is no  guarantee.”
Olivia Aguila, 21, earned a degree in Mass Communications and  graduated 
cum laude last year from an exclusive school for  women. When she was still a student, she thought people were just  exaggerating when they tell her how difficult it is to find a job. But  it took Aguila four months and 50 job applications before she finally  landed a job as a project coordinator, overseeing promotional activities  for a mouthwash brand. “ “It is hardly related to what I studied in  college,” she said.
During her training for her job as project coordinator, she was  assigned to a shopping mall to promote the product. “I felt so  embarrassed. I hid when I saw a high school friend,” said Aguila.
Aguila resigned from her job as project coordinator this January to look  for a job that is in line with her training in college.  However, she  ended up in a real estate company, working at the customer service  department. “It is totally unrelated to my course,” she said.
“Eventually, I want to find a job that is related to my course,”  Aguila told Bulatlat, “I do not see anything lacking in me. I just think  that the career I want to take is very competitive.”
Prioritize Job Generation
Padilla thinks that the government is failing in its responsibility  to generate local jobs, especially for fresh graduates like her. She  added that there should also be equal opportunities for all, adding that  graduates of popular and expensive colleges and universities corner the  few jobs available for fresh graduates.
Padilla said she is challenging the candidates for president in the  May 2010 elections to make job generation a priority. Padilla said if  she does not get a decent job soon, she would consider working abroad,  even as a domestic helper.
“This is a sad reality in the country because of the employment  crisis. Our bright and competitive graduates are being pushed to go  abroad when they can do so much more for the country,” Kabataan  Partylist Rep. Raymond Palatino said in a statement.
Another option, Palatino said, is entering the Business Process  Outsourcing (BPO) industry. But, said Palatino, BPOs are now  implementing a standardized competency exam to streamline the  recruitment of their applicants.  “We could expect a lesser number of  new graduates being hired,” Palatino said.
“This is supposed to be our ’sunshine industry’. But we see no light  shining for our new graduates if they continue to push through with  these exams,” he said..... 
MORE
Source:     (Bulatlat.com)
URL: 
http://www.bulatlat.com/main/2010/04/10/difficult-times-ahead-for-fresh-graduates/