Gov’t poverty metrics: You’re not poor if you spend P21 per meal | Inquirer News

Gov’t poverty metrics: You’re not poor if you spend P21 per meal

By: - Content Researcher Writer / @inquirerdotnet
/ 02:41 PM August 15, 2024

Gov’t poverty metrics: You’re not poor if you spend P21 per meal

POVERTY composite image from file photos

(This report was first published in 2022 and was updated to reflect the latest government data on being food poor)

MANILA, Philippines—With the government’s food threshold, Imelda Mendez, 42, who spends P25 for her lunch—a cup of rice and a viand of vegetables—is not considered poor.

Article continues after this advertisement

Back in 2022, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said the food threshold for a family of five in 2021 was P8,379, indicating that the government won’t classify you as “food poor” if you spend more than P18.62 per meal.m

FEATURED STORIES

This could mean two pieces of pandesal, a cup of coffee, and a glass of milk for breakfast; a cup of rice, a viand of vegetables or 50 grams of meat or fish for lunch; and a cup of rice, powdered broth, and a viand of vegetables for dinner.

Over two years later, while the food threshold was already hiked, based on data from the National Economic and Development Authority, the said standard is still low at P64 a day, or P21.33 for every meal.

Article continues after this advertisement

Almost 20 million Filipinos were considered poor in 2021 as poverty incidence rose to 18.1 percent from 16.7 percent—P17.67 million—in 2018. Based on initial PSA data, poverty incidence fell to 15.5 percent in 2023, or 17.54 million poor Filipinos

Article continues after this advertisement

READ: PH poverty incidence rises to 18.1% in 2021; 19.99 million Filipinos considered poor

Article continues after this advertisement
POVERTY PERSISTENCE

GRAPHIC: Ed Lustan / INQUIRER.net

The poverty threshold in 2023, which is the minimum income that a family of five needs to meet basic food and non-food needs, was set at P13,873, higher than the P12,030 in 2021 and P10,756 in 2018.

But as the think tank Ibon Foundation said in 2019, the way the government counts the poor “grossly underestimates” poverty in the Philippines, stressing that many poor Filipinos are left out of the data.

Article continues after this advertisement

The food threshold of P8,379 in 2021 was higher than P7,553 in 2018. Last year’s food threshold, which is the minimum income that a family of five needs to meet basic food requirements, was P9,581.

This leaves a household some P4,202 for basic non-food needs—clothing, housing, light, water, rental of dwelling units, medical care, education, transportation and communication, household operations and personal care.

Living in poverty

Mendez, a peanut vendor, said she earns P300 to P350 every day, and, because her husband does construction work once in a while, she stressed that there are times when they move past the poverty threshold, or the government’s definition of poor.

Imelda Mendez, 42, works from 3 a.m. to 3 p.m. every day inside the Cauayan City Public Market, to bring home a meager amount of money for her family

LIVING IN POVERTY. Imelda Mendez, 42, works from 3 a.m. to 3 p.m. every day inside the Cauayan City Public Market, to bring home a meager amount of money for her family. PHOTO BY KURT DELA PEÑA / INQUIRER.net

But is Mendez really not poor? INQUIRER.net asked her and this was her response: “Kulang ‘yung kinikita namin sa araw-araw. Talagang pinagkakasya na lang namin dahil ang hirap ng buhay.”

(Our daily income is really not enough. We’re only making do with what we have because life is really hard nowadays.)

The PSA said 5.9 percent of Filipinos did not have enough income to meet even the basic food needs in 2021. They are the “food poor”. This rate fell to 4.3 percent in 2023.

OVERTY AS DEFINED BY GOV’T

GRAPHIC: Ed Lustan / INQUIRER.net

The P13,873 poverty threshold in 2023 was almost 70 percent for basic food requirements and over 30 percent for basic non-food needs.

READ: Poverty seen from above

Mendez said her family, which has five members, is hardly surviving: “Ang problema ko ngayon ay talagang hindi ko na maisip kung paano pagkakasiyahin ang kinikita ko araw-araw para sa lahat ng gastusin namin.”

(The problem now is that I really don’t know what to do to make our income enough for all our daily needs.)

She said most of the P300 to P350 she earns every day is for basic food needs while the remaining amount is for basic non-food requirements. “Pinagkakasya lang namin ‘yung sa pagkain kasi kailangang may matira pa para sa iba pang gastusin,” she said.

(We’re spending less on food because we still need to spend some on other needs.)

‘Left with no choice’

The latest poverty threshold of P13,873 for a family of five per month indicates that each member only has over P90 every day for both basic food needs and basic non-food requirements.

READ: As Duterte stepped down, more Filipinos tighten belts to make ends meet

Josefina Quilang, 43, a vegetable vendor, told INQUIRER.net that while her family of six aspires for a better life, poverty leaves them with no choice but to make do with what they have.

Josefina Quilang, 43, a vegetable vendor

MAKING DO WITH WHAT THEY HAVE. Josefina Quilang, 43, shares her daily struggles amid rising inflation and worsening poverty. PHOTO BY KURT DELA PEÑA / INQUIRER.net

“Sa hirap ng buhay, kung talagang kailangang pagkasiyahin, talagang pinagkakasiya ko na po ‘yung kakarampot na kinikita ko para sa pagkain namin at iba pang mga pangangailangan,” she said.

(Because life is hard, we are only making do with what we have for food and basic non-food needs, even if what we have is a meager amount.)

She said to make do with what they have, her family allots only a kilo of rice for the day—breakfast, lunch, dinner—while limiting basic non-food expenses. She stressed that life is really tough for her and her family.

RELATED STORY: PH inflation beyond the numbers: Deeper poverty, hunger

FOOD POOR

GRAPHIC: Ed Lustan / INQUIRER.net

Like Quilang, Nelson Yap, 48, a smoked fish vendor, told INQUIRER.net that he and his family already decided to spend less to cope with worsening poverty and inflation.

May mga anak kami. Kaming mag-asawa ay may hanapbuhay na dito sa palengke, may pinagkakakitaan na pero hirap na hirap pa rin kami sa buhay dahil wala ring gaanong namimili ngayon dahil sa hirap ng buhay,” he said.

(We have children. My wife and I already have a business here in the market, but we are still struggling because there are only a few people going here to buy. Life is really hard nowadays.)

Poor Filipinos

Yap said he and his wife are earning P500 to P700 a day, so like Mendez, they, too, would be considered not poor based on the poverty threshold set by the government. But Yap said the government definition of poor is flawed. He considers himself and his family poor no matter if government-set numbers say they’re not.

Nelson Yap, 48, a smoked fish vendor

NOT ENOUGH FOR EVERYDAY NEEDS. Nelson Yap, 48, stands behind the sets of smoked fish that he and his wife are selling everyday to make ends meet. PHOTO BY KURT DELA PEÑA / INQUIRER.net

Dito sa palengke, kung hindi ka uutang ng pera na patubuan, lalo kang maghihirap. Wala kaming magawa kung ‘di ang umutang kasi ano ang ititinda namin kung wala kaming sariling puhunan,” he shared.

(Here in the market, if you will not borrow money with interest rates, you will be poorer. We have no choice but to borrow money because we have nothing to sell if we have no money to invest.)

This was the reason that the Ibon Foundation had said that the government’s way of counting the poor is unrealistic and is detached from daily poverty realities because of “low standards”.

The Social Reform and Poverty Alleviation Act defines “poor” as individuals and families whose incomes fall below the poverty threshold as defined by the government or cannot afford in a sustained manner to meet their minimum basic needs.

But as stressed by the think tank, a lot of poor Filipinos, like Yap, are left out of the data. “The monthly poverty threshold is just P10,727 [in 2010] for a family of five. This is just around P71 per person per day at P50 for food needs and P21 for non-food needs.”

INCOME GAP

GRAPHIC: Ed Lustan / INQUIRER.net

Rosario Guzman, research head of the Ibon Foundation, told INQUIRER.net that the government’s persistence in using “outdated” poverty assumptions is the main hindrance to addressing poverty in the Philippines.

“It allows the government to continue with anti-poor policies, including wage depression, contractualization, and imposition of regressive consumption taxes, while simply relying on limited cash transfers to pacify social unrest,” she said.

RELATED STORY: Surge in prices as Putin assaults Ukraine seen threatening PH poor most

The think tank had said in May 2022 that a family of five in Metro Manila needs P1,087 daily or P25,605 monthly “living wage,” which the Cambridge English Dictionary said is the wage level that is enough to pay for things that one needs to live.

Based on its latest estimates, the family living wage is now P1,207 a day, or P26,261 a month.

READ: As Bongbong Marcos prepares to govern, calls for ‘living wage’ grow louder

9% poverty incidence in 2028

When President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. delivered his first State of the Nation Address, he said he would want to end his six-year presidency in 2028 with a nine percent or single-digit poverty rate.

However, Sonny Africa, executive director of the Ibon Foundation, told INQUIRER.net that it is “extremely unlikely” for the government to achieve a nine percent poverty incidence in 2028.

“The target means that poverty incidence has to be cut by around 1.5 percentage points per year from the 18.1 percent in 2021. This is very much faster than the historical average of a less than one percentage point reduction annually,” he said.

He explained that the easing of poverty in 2018 (16.7 percent) was because of the almost P7,000 increase in the cash transfer given to recipients of the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program.

POVERTY PERCENTAGE PER REGION

GRAPHIC: Ed Lustan / INQUIRER.net

“The large bump in cash transfers was enough to push some borderline poor above the very low official poverty line,” he said, stressing that it is “kind of impossible” to bring down poverty incidence to nine percent.

“Assuming that the poverty line won’t be adjusted downwards to artificially and merely statistically reduce poverty incidence, there are too many factors going against rapid poverty reduction.”

Impossible?

Africa said economic recovery is stalling with a quarter-to-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) contraction in the second quarter of 2022: “It will also be recalled that economic growth was slowing in each of the three years even before the pandemic lockdowns hit, so there’s not even any pre-pandemic growth momentum to go back to.”

RELATED STORY: From P10,000 to P6,000 a month: How PH poor are sinking deeper

The PSA said in 2022 that because of high inflation, the GDP grew at a slower pace of 7.4 percent in the second quarter of 2022. It was, however, still in line with the government’s 6.5 percent to 7.5 percent target for this year.

Africa stressed that the government is entering a period of fiscal austerity with the proposed 2023 General Appropriations Act having the smallest increase in over 20 years and not even keeping up with inflation.

WHERE BASIC FUNDS GO

GRAPHIC: Ed Lustan / INQUIRER.net

“Its stimulus effect will also be further diminished to the extent that the budget goes to unproductive debt servicing or to import-dependent infra projects,” he said while stressing that the projected P5.27 trillion budget for 2023 is only a meager 4.9 percent increase from 2022 levels.

Job creation is also shallow since most work are poorly paying part-time work or self-employment and informal work, he said. Especially with inflation high, this will cut into consumption spending which accounts for some 70 percent of GDP.

RELATED STORY: COVID impact, lack of gov’t aid erode wage values in PH

“Looked at in this context, the ‘9 percent’ poverty incidence target seems like a propaganda device to distract from how serious the social crisis is and how little the administration is prepared to do to deal with this,” he said.

Income gap

The PSA said the income gap, which measures the average amount of income that the poor need to get out of poverty expressed in relation to the poverty threshold, stood at 22.6 percent.

This means that a family of five needs an additional monthly income of about P2,719 to move out of poverty. The PSA said this can serve as a useful reference, especially in determining the budget that can be earmarked for programs to lift Filipinos out of poverty.

But Africa had stressed on Twitter that poverty did not have to increase in 2021 if the government had given enough financial assistance to the poor, instead of giving corporations more profit.

Likewise, he said poverty did not have to increase in 2021 if the government “tested, traced and treated, instead of its fetish for lockdowns.”

At the regional level, the regions with the lowest poverty incidence among families in 2021 were Metro Manila (2.2 percent), Cordillera Administrative Region (6.9 percent), Central Luzon (8.3 percent), and Calabarzon (7.2 percent).

Meanwhile, the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) consistently figured with the highest poverty incidence among families at 29.8 percent in 2021.

More than half of the regions posted significant changes in their incidences from 2018 to 2021. The regions with significant increases were Metro Manila, Mimaropa, Ilocos Region, Central Luzon, Western Visayas, Central Visayas, and Northern Mindanao.

The PSA said significant decreases in poverty incidence were observed in the Cordillera Administrative Region, Davao Region, and BARMM.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

RELATED STORY: PH debt conundrum: Relying on consumption tax, making life tougher for the have-nots

TAGS: Bongbong Marcos, food-poor, Ibon Foundation, INQFocus, living wage, Philippine Statistics Authority, Sonny Africa, top stories home

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.