Filipinos have mostly not benefited from the country’s economic growth — equal to about 5 percent annually — during President Arroyo’s seven-year term, a top official yesterday admitted.
While the government had aimed for 7-percent growth annually, the actual figure was insufficient to lift significant numbers out of poverty, Romulo Neri, president of the Social Security System (SSS), said in a gloomy assessment of the outgoing leader’s period in office.
“Five percent is not good enough. We need about seven, possibly eight percent growth. That is why… this administration’s goal was to reach seven percent on a consistent basis,” he said at a forum aired by ABS-CBN television.
“Unfortunately we have been caught up in some crises and we were not able to sustain it,” he noted.
Government figures show that in 2006, about 30.1 percent of the population lived in poverty, up from 29 percent in 2003.
Although Arroyo’s government achieved a record 7.2-percent gross domestic product (GDP) growth in 2007, this was later brought down by the global financial crisis and various natural disasters.
Growth in 2009 was a mere 0.9 percent, the lowest in 11 years.
Arroyo is due to step down after presidential elections in May.
Neri, who served as socio-economic planning secretary from 2002 to 2007, said it appeared the wealthy had gained most from economic growth.
“Much of this growth is going to corporations. If you look at the savings rates… in the 1970s, much of the savings was in households, now the (bulk of) savings has shifted to corporate savings,” he said.
Meanwhile, alarmed with the rising hunger incidence in the country, Sen. Edgardo Angara reiterated the need to adopt and implement aggressive measures to combat hunger and reduce malnutrition.
According to the Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey, involuntary hunger has reached record numbers, with almost one in four Filipino households going hungry in the past three months.
The survey which was conducted last month also found indications that poor families have been lowering their standard of living.
Compared to the results of a similar survey in October, overall hunger rose 11 points in Metro Manila (27 percent or about 665,000 families); eight points in the Visayas (27.9 percent, or about 1 million families); six points in Mindanao (24.5 percent, or about 1 million families); and two points in the rest of Luzon (21.2 percent, or about 1.7 million families).
The glaring statistics, according to the former Agriculture secretary, only shows the urgency to prioritize hunger mitigation programs that target the country’s absolute poor, those who have no means to buy food.
Indian economist Amartya Sen argued that hunger is rooted in the differences in wealth and power among populations, which affect their access to limited resources. The solution, therefore, is redistributing purchasing power and ensuring that people have gainful employment that will provide them the means to access food.
Angara added, “Moreover, there is a need to establish mechanisms and promote national policies that give incentives for maximizing agricultural production. This could solve the problem in two ways: Increasing food production to stabilize prices and prevent fluctuations in supply, and raising the incomes of the rural poor who are often the casualties of hunger.” AFP
It’s women’s month!
“Support women every day of the year!”
Invoke Article 33 of the ILO constitution
against the military junta in Myanmar to carry out the 2021 ILO Commission of Inquiry recommendations against serious violations of Forced Labour and Freedom of Association protocols.
Accept National Unity Government
(NUG) of Myanmar.
Reject Military!
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Monthly Observances:
Women’s Role in History Month
Weekly Observances:
Week 1: Environmental Week
Women’s Week
Week 3: Philippine Industry and Made-in-the-Philippines
Products Week
Last Week: Protection and Gender-Fair Treatment
of the Girl Child Week
Daily Observances:
March 8: Women’s Rights and
International Peace Day;
National Women’s Day
Mar 4— Employee Appreciation Day
Mar 15 — World Consumer Rights Day
Mar 18 — Global Recycling Day
Mar 21 — International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
Mar 23 — International Day for the Right to the Truth concerning Gross Human Rights Violations and for the Dignity of Victims
Mar 25 — International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade
Mar 27 — Earth Hour