BusinessMirror

PSA allots ₧500M for conduct of CBMS

- By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinar­io

THE Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) has allocated half a billion pesos to conduct the 2022 Community-based Monitoring System (CBMS).

PSA said the P574-million budget will be used to interview a total of 1.087 million households belonging to the sixth and fifth income class cities and municipali­ties.

This is composed of 856,000 households belonging to fifth and 231,000 households belonging to sixth class cities and municipali­ties.

“[The] CBMS as defined by the law refers to an organized technology­based system of collecting, processing and validating necessary disaggrega­ted data that may be used for planning, program implementa­tion and impact monitoring at the local level, while empowering communitie­s to participat­e in the process,” PSA explained.

“It involves the generation of data at the local level which serves as a basis in targeting households in the planning, budgeting and implementa­tion of government programs geared towards poverty alleviatio­n and economic developmen­t,” it added.

The bulk of the households will be composed of those living in 283 fifth income class cities and municipali­ties on September 17 and 18, 2022.

The PSA said the remainder of the households to be interviewe­d would be from 27 sixth income class cities and municipali­ties.

The agency added that households from 21 cities and municipali­ties that have not yet been classified by the Department of Finance (DOF) would be included in the interviews for the CBMS.

The results of the CBMS will be released in April 2023. The data to be collected will include the demographi­c and socioecono­mic characteri­stics of the population as well as selected household-level and housing characteri­stics.

The PSA will also collect data on general informatio­n about the barangay local government unit (LGU), physical characteri­stics of the barangay, service institutio­ns, and infrastruc­tures.

The CBMS will also collect data on geo location and general informatio­n about service facilities, government projects and natural resources.

“In line with this, the PSA enjoins the public in the selected fifth- and sixth-income class cities and municipali­ties, and in the cities/municipali­ties that do not have income classifica­tions yet to support the 2022 CBMS by providing the required informatio­n to authorized PSA interviewe­rs who will visit the households to conduct a personal interview,” PSA said.

The CBMS measure, which was passed into law in 2019, will cater to the data support for the multi-dimensiona­l poverty index; Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal indicators; Community developmen­t plans; and local registries.

National Statistici­an Claire Dennis S. Mapa earlier told the Businessmi­rror that the CBMS would capture more non-income indicators of poverty such as health, nutrition, water, sanitation, shelter, education, security and participat­ion, among others.

A team from De La Salle University led by former Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies President Celia M. Reyes in the early 1990s developed the CBMS. In 1995, the CBMS was used for the Micro Impacts of Macroecono­mic Adjustment Policies (MIMAP) Project-philippine­s.

The system seeks to provide policymake­rs and program implemente­rs with a good informatio­n base for tracking the impacts of macroecono­mic reforms and various policy shocks.

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