This trend was accelerated after the 2009 Global Financial Crisis as European and North American banks coming under greater regulatory scrutiny and cost pressure started “off-shoring” increasingly complex functions such as risk and fraud management, portfolio management and financial modelling.

While India has claimed the lion’s share of these services, the Philippines, with its large pool of English-language graduates, has been a strong competitor – outclassing its Asean rivals.

The republic is certainly experiencing a secular boom that is powering property and auto sales as well as consumer spending. In the first 10 months of 2016, auto sales grew 24.5 per cent to 292,502 just as Malaysian sales plummeted 13.9 per cent.

But how has this industry benefited the ordinary Filipino?

Arnie V. Villarta (or “Eru”) is a 28-year old BPO agent from the province of Bulacan. Trained in psychology at the Central Luzon State University in Nueva Ecija, Eru comes from a family of rice farmers.

WATCH: Eru and Business Process Outsourcing

He readily admits how lucky he is: “I wouldn’t be here were it not for one of my older brothers. Our family isn’t wealthy but he was a BPO agent long before me and so he was a trailblazer. He also chipped in and paid for my college fees when it was needed.”

“My brother always said that being a BPO agent isn’t an end in itself. You have to use it to get where you want to go. He always wanted to be a teacher and now he’s following his chosen profession in Abu Dhabi.”

Even so, just over a year ago, Eru and his partner, tiring of the dismal quality of life in Manila, moved to the city of Iloilo in the Visayas – his partner’s hometown.

When he was living in Manila, Eru would wake up at 6am every morning, leaving his home by 7am in order to make the 5km journey to work in time for his 9am start.

He explains: “Catching a bus was quite tricky as a lot of people were also trying to get to work. If I couldn’t get a ride by around 7.30am, I would definitely be late. Even though the office was just 5km away, I would have to allocate two hours for travel – in both directions.”

By way of contrast, in Iloilo, Eru spends just 30 minutes commuting each way.

But there is a downside: “My salary is about 25-30 per cent less than it was in Manila, but at least now I have time to myself. I have been supplementing my income by selling my paintings.”

Certainly, since moving to Iloilo, Eru has been able to save as well as send money regularly back home to his parents.

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Fifteen years ago, it would have been unimaginable for a young man from a rural background to land a decent job in Manila only to “bail out” and move to the provinces.

The rapid expansion of the Philippine BPO industry is giving young Filipinos the chance to find middle-class jobs that previously only existed outside the country.

Moreover, as Eru’s story reveals, the BPO industry isn’t confined to Metro Manila alone.

Over the past few years, many of the large BPO companies have expanded into the peripheries – to Cebu, Davao, Baguio, Bacolod and even Iloilo – offering competitive office rents, guaranteed power supplies and most crucially, a transportation system which is free from the suffocating gridlock of Metro Manila.

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Certainly, the Philippines’ BPO industry has come a long way since its humble beginnings in early 2000, when there were reportedly only four call centres in the country.

Today, there are estimated to be almost 800 call centres and the industry as a whole contributes 10 per cent to the country’s GDP.

While the industry receives some government incentives – tax holidays and exemptions from import and customs duties – its key strength is the Philippines’ unique human capital: English-educated workers who are not only able to communicate fluently, but also empathise with their predominantly US-based clients.

Indeed, I’m caught by surprise when Eru turns to me over our lunch meeting and asks “Don’t you have BPO in your country?”

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