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Is Philippines A Third World Country? - YouTube
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is the Philippines a third-world country?
What do I think? What the Filipinos think.
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And is it a good idea to hire people
there?
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So, a year ago I posted a video about why
I hire people in the Philippines and we
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talked about it being a third world
country. I got hundreds and hundreds of
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comments requesting that I change that.
And that I call it a developing country.
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Or developing nation. And that definitely
describes what I saw when I went there
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last November. And so they are definitely
a developing country. I mean they have
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the technology. They have the skyscrapers.
They have the Internet. My team does
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amazing work. They're highly educated so
they are the developing country. When I
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think of a third world country, I think
about people that live remotely that
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live in huts, that live in the jungle,
that don't have running water, that don't
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have electricity. And you know, there are
so many islands on the Philippines that
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I'm sure there are millions of people
that are still third-world in the
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Philippines. There's just thousands and
thousands of islands. But the area that I
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went, you know within several arrows
radius in both ways of Manila. You know,
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there were freeways, there were gas
stations. There's fast-food places.
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There's skyscrapers, there's internet.
There's free Wi-Fi.
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There's convenience and grocery stores
and I don't consider that third-world
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but definitely a developing country. One
of the reasons why even though you have
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all of these amenities or all these
resources is they still have their
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struggles. They have internet shut offs.
They have power outages. When they have
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hurricanes, it's really devastating to
that country. I guess a hurricane is
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devastating to any country. Let me put it
this way: I mean minimum wage is really
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really low in the Philippines. In fact,
let me bring up my computer here. Okay, so
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I had this on my screen earlier. Let me
just show you where the Philippines is.
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Alright, we come across the Pacific
Ocean. There we are.
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Philippines. Tons of islands. Apparently
there's like 10,000 islands in total.
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Manila is the most populated. There's
other big cities like Davao down here.
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In November, I'm excited I'm going to
spend a few days in Manila then I'm
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going to come down here to El Nido and
how
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some book writing time. But I got off
track. We're coming here looking for
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minimum wage. One thing that I found
that was really helpful was this map. You
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see that according to this color code,
you know the darkest regions is up here.
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The 10 to 16 dollars an hour. Down
to the Blues that are the 5 to 10
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dollars per range. All the way down here
to like this light purpley color and
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then we get grey for no data or no
minimum wage. So we see that that Canada
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and Australia in parts of Europe and
England have the highest minimum wage.
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The United States is a little bit lower
than that. You see you know some
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countries down here in South America and
in the Middle East. Always I noticed a
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pan over here. Then you you know, the
color starts to get lighter and lighter
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and lighter. And notice that kind of a
lightest purple... You see lots of this
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through Africa. You see some things here
through India Mongolia. But you see the
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Philippines right there. The Philippines.
And if we go down and we check that
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looks like you know the minimum wage of
zero to $1.00 per hour. So, it depends on
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what part of the Philippines you're in.
I'm sure if we zoomed into a whole map
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of the Philippines you'd see that you
know in the heart of Manila or the heart
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of another big city in the Philippines,
incomes or minimum wages are higher than
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that. But in other places, it's lower.
Besides the low minimum wage, it's
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actually really hard to find a job in
the Philippines that pays really good.
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Now a good job, what people are willing
to do for $400 a month, they're willing
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to leave their home and family for 6
months at a time to go on a cruise ship
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or to go to another Island and work a
job and send that money back home.
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They're willing to really make a huge
sacrifice for $400 a month. So, that's a
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great opportunity if I were to step in
and offer them more. Say, I paid them
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$500 a month and they could
work from their home. And they only had
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to work 40 hours a week. And they could
have a flexible schedule so they can
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dedicate time to family and to their
hobbies and whatnot. That is a dream
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opportunity for them. I mean that website
that I've mentioned in other videos
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virtualassistanttool.com, there are
200,000 people from the
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Philippines that have filled out a
profile there and let you know all of
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their skills saying, "Hey,
I would love to work for an American
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boss. I'm willing to work for $350 a
month. Please hire me.
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"I'm willing to work for $500 a month,
please hire me." I noticed I got off-track
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again from the topic. Is the Philippines
a third-world country? Well, I have
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another perspective. When I was there
last November, there was this amazing
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mall. In fact, we went to the top floor of
this mall. There's a great restaurant
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there and that's where I met my team for
the first time. Very elegant fancy dinner.
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But right outside the mall, I needed to
catch an uber and go back to my
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Airbnb. And on the other side of this
wall was this big massive area of slum.
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It was like crumbled buildings. There was
extension cords going and you could see
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a fan inside of this half survived
building and a curtain blowing. People
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were living in this slum and I just
thought it was the most interesting
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contrast. When I think of a third-world
country, I mentioned that I thought about
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people living in huts but I still
thought of them like being happy and
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thriving and and having food to eat and
and I don't know. The contrast was
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actually really surprising to me that
right across this wall from this fancy
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ornate, amazing, beautiful like II go in
the mall and there's Rolex and all these
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high brands, more elegant than the malls
in Utah actually. And then right across
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the wall was this slum. You know, lots of
dirty looking pets. You know, no sidewalks,
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no grass, no healthy trees. Just all this
rubble and lots of families with pinned
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up blankets living there. And I don't
know I'm telling you this. I'm just kind
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of letting you know that there are some
third-world parts even in the developed
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part of the Philippines. And I'm sad
about that. I'm hoping that the work that
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I'm sending to the Philippines, the money
that I'm providing there... Even though
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it's a great blessing to me, even though
it's a lower amount that I would need to
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have to hire people like that here; my
hope is that I'm helping to elevate the
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economy there. You know in my small way
of hiring 14 people are giving 14 people
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jobs. But with that, if you're an American
or somebody looking to hire people in
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the
Philippines then I definitely want you
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to check out the website that I use. Is
virtualassistanttool.com. You can dig
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through those 200,000
profiles and find the person that
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matches the criteria you're looking for
and just reach out to them directly.
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