ROBOTICS AND JOBS: TIME FOR A NATIONAL CABINET CLUSTER ON AUTOMATION
ROBOTICS AND JOBS: TIME FOR A NATIONAL CABINET CLUSTER ON AUTOMATION
The robots are not coming—they are already here.
From driverless cars and agricultural drones to robots that clean homes
and assist in hospitals, the age of automation is unfolding before our eyes. In
countries like Japan and Germany, robots are already working together with
humans. The question is: Are we prepared for this reality in the
Philippines?
We are at a crossroads. On one hand, robotics offers extraordinary
opportunities for efficiency, safety, and innovation. On the other, it presents
very real threats to employment in many sectors that Filipinos depend on for
daily survival. We cannot afford to be caught unprepared. The longer we
delay, the harder the disruption will hit.
From TWG to Cabinet Cluster: A
Strategic Upgrade
Previously, I proposed the creation of a Technical Working Group (TWG)
under the Presidential Management Staff (PMS) to study the impact of robotics.
But considering how fast automation is advancing—and how deeply it will affect
labor, transport, agriculture, industry, and even domestic work—this is no
longer just a technical issue.
It is now a national strategic concern.
We need more than a study group. We need a Cabinet Cluster on Robotics,
Artificial Intelligence, and the Future of Work.
This proposed Cabinet Cluster would be tasked with crafting a unified
national policy on robotics and automation—covering regulation, economic
strategy, education, and labor protection. Just like the Climate Change
Adaptation Cluster or the Economic Development Cluster, this group should be
composed of key government departments with overlapping responsibilities.
Key Member Agencies of the Proposed
Cabinet Cluster
- Department of
Labor and Employment (DOLE): To assess labor risks and lead
retraining and skills upgrading.
- Department of
Science and Technology (DOST): To oversee technological R&D
and set standards for robotics and AI use.
- Department of
Information and Communications Technology (DICT): To coordinate
data systems, cybersecurity, and infrastructure needs.
- Department of
Trade and Industry (DTI): To balance innovation with
enterprise support, especially for MSMEs.
- Department of
Agriculture (DA): To regulate agricultural
robotics and protect farmer livelihoods.
- Department of
Transportation (DOTr): To regulate autonomous vehicles
and prepare infrastructure.
- Department of
Education (DepEd) and Commission on Higher Education (CHED): To redesign
the curriculum to include automation, coding, and critical thinking.
- TESDA: To lead the
upskilling of the Filipino workforce through technical-vocational
programs.
This cluster should ideally be chaired by the Executive Secretary or the
Secretary of DOST and should report directly to the President. Automation is
simply too critical—and too cross-cutting—to be managed by any single agency in
isolation.
Why a Cabinet Cluster Matters
Technology doesn’t wait for legislation. We must create a framework that
both welcomes innovation and protects human dignity and labor.
Consider these realities:
- Driverless
transport threatens millions of jobs in our jeepney, taxi, and bus sectors.
- Household
robots may reduce employment opportunities for domestic helpers.
- Automated
farming equipment may displace rural farmers if
not properly managed.
- AI-powered
chatbots and clerical tools are already reshaping
white-collar work in call centers and offices.
The goal is not to stop automation—but to shape it. To ensure that
robots and AI serve us, not displace us. To make technology a bridge to
inclusive progress, not a wall that separates the privileged from the poor.
Policy Recommendations for the Cluster
1. National Robotics
Strategy
Set a 10-year roadmap balancing innovation and employment safeguards.
2. Incentives for
Human-Robot Collaboration
Promote “cobots” (collaborative robots) that assist workers rather than replace
them.
3. Skills Transition
Programs
Create training pipelines for displaced workers to move into robot maintenance,
programming, and logistics.
4. AI and Automation
Laws
Determine if we need new legal protections, data privacy rules, or ethical
standards for human-machine interaction.
5. Pilot Zones for
Automation
Designate “automation sandbox zones” where robotic technologies can be tested
alongside labor protections.
6. International
Partnerships
Work with countries like South Korea and Japan to adapt their best practices
while keeping the Filipino context in mind.
7. Public Awareness
Campaigns
Inform citizens about the coming automation wave and how they can prepare,
rather than panic.
Final Thoughts
Mr. President, this is a defining issue of our time. If we delay, we will
be reactive instead of proactive. We will end up protecting old jobs instead of
creating new ones. We will see discontent rise as machines replace people,
without giving our citizens the tools to adapt.
Let’s be clear: we cannot stop technology—but we can govern its use.
A Cabinet Cluster on Robotics and Automation is no longer a luxury. It is
a necessity. Let us face the future not with fear, but with foresight. Let us
turn disruption into development—powered not just by machines, but by a
government that knows how to lead in a new era.
The future is knocking. Let’s answer it—wisely and together.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com,
senseneres.blogspot.com
09-08-2025
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