2026-01-24
18 分钟This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK.
quarterly earnings or about tech reviews.
It's about what technology is actually doing to your work, your politics,
your everyday life, and all the bizarre ways people are using the internet.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Philippines sends millions of workers around the world.
More than half of them are women.
An vast majority work as domestic helpers in cities like Singapore and Hong Kong.
For them, going abroad means more money, but it's not an easy choice.
Many Filipinos leave behind their families to take those opportunities overseas.
mothers, for example,
often live away from their own children to be able to care for other children and that socially has cost quite a bit of strain.
It's often the topic of Filipino films and soap operas.
In the cultural minds, it's big precisely because it's so common.
And in some cases, there can be dangerous consequences when they get there.
This is not to say that every employer in Singapore is like this.
By and large, employers here are fair.
They treat their workers well,
but there is a power imbalance that is very entrenched in our regulations and our laws.
Will the day ever come when they can stay at home and still make a good living?