By Mortz C. Ortigoza
DAGUPAN CITY – Unless the stakeholders of artificial intelligence (AI) in the Philippines do something, the P4.9 trillion projected incomes from it for ten years will be prejudiced.
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“I want you to put
that in your mind: P4.9 trillion! This is actually the amount projected by the
International Monetary Fund that can be generated with the use of AI. So
maraming industry ang puedeng gamitan ng AI. So can you imagine if we can take
part of that P4.9 trillion kahit 1% lang ng P4.9 trillion maraming pera na iyan,”
according to IAmContact Solutions Chief Operation Officer Nestor Feland Panopio,
one of the three resource speakers of the AI Technology Seminar sponsored by
Eventually Events PH and Philippines-Zhangzhou General Chamber of Commerce Inc. held
recently at the Blackscoop Cafe here.
Panopio presented that the system in the country is not conducive for A.I to thrive.
“Unfortunately, that
is not the case. There is a huge dichotomy of AI in the Philippines. With
personal use there is a high personnel employment versus low institutional
readiness,” he stressed.
Even AI photos, videos, and others through Nano Banana,
ChatGPT, and others are ubiquitous nowadays at social media like Facebook,
Panopio deplored however that the business and government sectors poorly used these
technologies to buttress their stocks.
“Pero on the other
hand you notice that commercial establishment and even the government for that
matter don’t used AI that much gaya pag kukuha tayo ng permit mano-mano. Some
institutions, LGUs (local government units) paper trail pa rin kailangan nila
pag kumuha ng permit. There is a lot of commercial establishment now that does
not adapt to AI. Kung gaano kalaki ng popularity ng AI ganoon naman kababa ang
pagamit ng industriya kababa pagdating ng AI,” Panopio explained to
attendees who come from LGUs, Department of Information and Communications
Technology, Department of Interior and Local Government, academe like those
from the Pangasinan State University in Lingayen and University of Eastern
Pangasinan in Binalonan, business, and others.
The weaknesses of these sectors, as Panopio expounded, prejudiced the P4.9 trillion supposed growth in the next ten years in the Philippines.
He said that the national government ranked last on AI
account where it got 35.7 points over 100 points readiness while the business
sector is at worse at 14.9% over 100%.
“Most of our
businesses use mano-mano na process in their business”.
He said that 30% of the jobs at the call centers are at risk
if the stakeholders in the country did not heed the call to correct their
weaknesses.
According to an AI Overview, this technology could give the
Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) in the country a shift to higher value
services where their personnel transition from commoditized tasks to complex,
tech-enabled processes that require human oversight and strategy. AI can
make the average Filipino workers "super employees," benefiting the
workforce through increased productivity and capabilities. It can also empower
grassroots entrepreneurs and Micro,
Small, and Medium-sized Enterprises (MSMEs) to scale faster, cut costs,
and innovate within a digital economy. By moving beyond servicing global
markets to actively shaping them with AI-driven solutions and ethical
frameworks, Filipinos can lead in the digital economy.


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