AI Doesn’t Take Jobs. Companies Do. — What Doc Ligot Wants Every Filipino Worker to Know
Industry leaders are dancing around the truth about AI and jobs — but Doc Ligot isn’t. Here’s the data-backed reality every Filipino worker deserves to hear.
The Weekly Headline: AI Doesn’t Take Jobs. Companies Do. — What Doc Ligot Wants Every Filipino Worker to Know
The Question Nobody in the Room Will Answer
There’s a pattern playing out in corporate boardrooms, tech conferences, and LinkedIn posts across the Philippines: ask a business leader directly whether AI will take jobs, and watch them sidestep. You’ll get talk of “transformation,” “augmentation,” and “new opportunities.” What you rarely get is a straight answer.
Dominic “Doc” Ligot — one of the Philippines’ most prominent AI ethics advocates and data scientists — isn’t having it. In a recent post that cut through the noise, he put it plainly: “Industry leaders are not giving you a straight answer regarding AI and jobs. But the truth is simple.”
What the IMF Actually Says
Doc Ligot cited data from the International Monetary Fund that puts a number on the risk: 14% of jobs in the Philippines are at risk of displacement by AI. This is based on two factors the IMF calls exposure and complementarity. Exposure measures how much of a job AI can already perform. Complementarity measures whether AI is more likely to work alongside you — or instead of you.
A separate IMF working paper goes further, estimating that up to 36% of Philippine jobs are “highly exposed” to AI disruption — with the business process outsourcing (BPO) sector carrying the highest concentration of vulnerable roles. The data also reveals a gender gap: roughly half of jobs held by women in the Philippines fall into the high-exposure category, compared to about a quarter of those held by men.
These aren’t speculative numbers. They’re drawn from occupational mapping of the actual tasks performed in Philippine workplaces, cross-referenced against what current AI systems can already do.
The Most Important Sentence in the Debate
Here’s where Doc Ligot sharpens the conversation: “AI does not take jobs. Companies do. A decision has to be made to automate.”
This reframe matters. It shifts the question from what can AI do? to what will organizations decide to do with it? Technology doesn’t terminate workers — people in positions of power make that call. Which means workers, communities, and policymakers have more agency in this story than the “AI is inevitable” framing suggests.
This is the kind of grounded, accountability-centered perspective that has made Doc Ligot one of the most trusted voices on responsible AI in the Philippines. As the featured speaker for the upcoming webinar series at AI Talks @ Younifest, he brings exactly this kind of clarity to audiences ranging from students to senior executives. You can find details on his upcoming sessions at aitalks.younifest.com.
What Workers and Organizations Should Do Now
The honest answer is: don’t wait for certainty before acting. Map your own exposure — which tasks in your role can already be done faster, cheaper, or better by AI tools available today? Then ask the harder question: is your organization investing in upskilling, or quietly building the business case to reduce headcount?
At the policy level, the Philippines is currently debating several AI regulation bills, including proposals to create an Artificial Intelligence Development Authority (AIDA) and a formal AI Bill of Rights. These frameworks, if passed, could shape how companies are permitted to deploy automation — and what protections workers can expect. The conversation about AI governance and labor is happening right now. The best time to get informed is before decisions get made for you.
AI isn’t coming. It’s here.
And the question isn’t whether it will reshape work in the Philippines — it already is. The question is who gets to shape the decisions being made around it. Getting informed, asking hard questions of your employers, and listening to clear-eyed voices like Doc Ligot’s is where that starts.
Further Reading
- Doc Ligot on X — AI and jobs: what industry leaders won’t tell you
- IMF Working Paper: Artificial Intelligence and the Philippine Labor Market
- AI Job Disruption: What’s Hype, What’s Real, and What Can the Philippines Do About It — Rights Report
- AI Bill of Rights Pushed for the Philippines — Business Mirror
- Toward a Filipino Framework for AI — The Manila Times
About Doc Ligot:
Dominic “Doc” Ligot is one of the leading voices in AI in the Philippines. Doc has been extensively cited in local and global media outlets including The Economist, South China Morning Post, Washington Post, and Agence France Presse. His award-winning work has been recognized and published by prestigious organizations such as NASA, Data.org, Digital Public Goods Alliance, the Group on Earth Observations (GEO), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the World Health Organization (WHO), and UNICEF.
If you need guidance or training in maximizing AI for your career or business, reach out to Doc via https://docligot.com.
Follow Doc Ligot on Facebook: https://facebook.com/docligotAI