The Philippine Construction and Metals & Engineering sectors remain pivotal to national economic growth, infrastructure expansion, and industrial modernization. With continued sectoral growth, demand for semi-skilled and skilled workers-particularly in welding, plumbing, fabrication, and construction equipment operation-remains high. Persistent skills gaps, labor shortages, and limited participation of women and marginalized groups underscore the need for targeted, gender-responsive strategies in technical and vocational education and training (TVET).
This TVET Skills Insight Report analyzes current and emerging skills needs for 2026-2030, emphasizing competency alignment, industry readiness, and inclusive workforce development. Core technical competencies in welding and plumbing are increasingly complemented by emerging skills, including advanced welding techniques, smart plumbing systems, predictive maintenance, digital monitoring, green construction practices, and integration of Industry 4.0 technologies. Cross-cutting skills such as workplace safety, problem-solving, teamwork, communication, entrepreneurship, and labor law compliance are equally critical to enhance employability, productivity, and workplace adaptability.
Despite strong labor demand, women remain underrepresented in technical trades-comprising less than 10% of welders and under 15% in plumbing-while participation in construction equipment operation is below 3%. These gaps reflect persistent occupational stereotypes, limited access to training opportunities, and non-gender-responsive learning environments. Expanding access through inclusive TVET programs, targeted scholarships, mentorship, blended learning, mobile training units, and safe facilities can mitigate labor shortages while promoting equitable workforce participation.
Findings from the TESDA Women's Center industry consultation confirm that existing welding and plumbing curricula are broadly aligned with workplace requirements but require modernization to address evolving industry standards, emerging technologies, and advanced competencies. Industry experts emphasized enhancements such as VR-assisted welding simulations, plasma cutting and fusion equipment, updated plumbing tools and layout techniques, smart bathroom systems, and adherence to national and sustainability standards. They also recommended strengthened occupational safety training, practical exposure through OJT, trade fairs, plant visits, and continuous engagement with industry partners to maintain relevance and workforce readiness.
Based on these insights, recommendations focus on:
By implementing these strategies, the Philippine TVET system-particularly TESDA Women's Center-can produce a resilient, competent, and future-ready workforce capable of meeting current and emerging sectoral demands. These interventions will support industrial modernization, infrastructure development, gender equity, and inclusive economic growth, positioning the Philippines to achieve a sustainable, skilled, and competitive workforce aligned with global labor market trends.