Business World

PHL poverty reduction strategy focused on job quality, safety nets

- Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza

THE government’s approach to reducing poverty will focus on enhancing the quality of jobs and expanding social protection­s, the Palace said.

Acting Press Secretary Cheloy Velicaria-Garafil added that the government remains confident that it can reduce the poverty rate to 9% by the end of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.’s six-year term.

“The 9% goal by 2028 will be accomplish­ed by bringing growth to a higher level, (creating) quality jobs and improving the social protection system, among others,” Ms. Velicaria-Garafil said in a statement after Mr. Marcos met with the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority.

Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan was quoted in the statement as saying that “growth and jobs and paying attention to social protection to address shocks like typhoons and crises (will) enable us to achieve faster reduction of poverty from where it is today to the single digits.”

Bringing down the poverty rate to 9% by 2028 is achievable even with the uncertain global economy and the challenges of inflation, Mr. Balisacan said.

The poverty reduction target was first announced by Finance Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno in July, when inflation rose to 6.4% from 6.1% in June. In August, Mr. Balisacan said the government was on track to meet the poverty goal.

The World Bank forecast in October a Philippine poverty rate of 17.1% this year, against 18.1% in 2021.

In a separate statement, the Office of the Press Secretary said the government will present the Philippine Developmen­t Plan (PDP) for 2023 to 2028 next month. This is the first time the PDP will be presented before the start of the first full year of a sitting President.

“It will come out next month and we already briefed (the President) on the major elements… the key elements of those plans, and he provided comments, suggestion­s moving forward,” Mr. Balisacan was quoted as saying.

The plan involves “actionable strategies” to develop the domestic market considerin­g its potential for attracting investment, according to Ms. Velicaria-Garafil.

Mr. Marcos asked that the plan “address the concerns of... local markets,” Mr. Balisacan said, to ensure “that they receive the same assistance.”

Mr. Marcos told Cambodian business leaders in a roundtable discussion last week that domestic markets and manufactur­ers are among his priorities.

Last month, Mr. Balisacan said sustained “inflation shock” could cut gross domestic product by 0.6 percentage points in 2023. Inflation rose to 7.7% in October from 6.9% a month earlier.

The Global Multidimen­sional Poverty Index of the United Nations and Developmen­t Program and the Oxford Poverty and Human Developmen­t Initiative indicates that the “multidimen­sional” poor in the Philippine­s or those who “suffer from multiple disadvanta­ges” aside from low income, accounted for 5.8% of the population in 2020, equivalent to 6.503 million people.

The monetary poverty index, meanwhile, came in at 2.7% of the population. Monetary poverty refers to those living below the $1.90-per-day poverty threshold in 2011 purchasing power parity terms. —

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