Philippine Daily Inquirer

Facts and theories

- Mahar Mangahas

THAT Vice President Jejomar Binay’s public satisfacti­on rating rose from March to June this year, while at the same time he lost his customary lead in the people’s citations of deserving successors to President Noynoy Aquino, are two separate facts discovered by the last two Social Weather Stations surveys. I am neither pleased nor disturbed by these facts, since I have no preconcept­ions of how the people’s opinions should change over time, as a matter of profession­al habit. I simply accept whatever the survey findings are.

The discomfitu­re of some pundits with what they think is “inconsiste­ncy” between opposite movements in a job performanc­e rating and an electabili­ty rating indicates that their theory of how the two ratings should interact is inadequate to explain the most recent facts. What they should do is adjust their theory, rather than question the facts.

Facts cannot be manipulate­d to fit theories. Rather, theories should be expanded to fit the facts. The proper way to appraise survey findings is by comparing them with those of independen­t surveys.

Examine the survey questions carefully. The question on satisfacti­on with Mr. Binay’s performanc­e pertains specifical­ly to his position as vice president. Survey respondent­s who do not know that he is the VP are not asked what they think of his performanc­e. To find out whether his work with respect to housing and overseas employment affected his VP rating, one needs to know if respondent­s were also aware of his other roles in the government. But that is not standard practice in surveys of government performanc­e. In the time of President Joseph Estrada, for instance, SWS never asked survey respondent­s if they knew that Vice President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo was also the social welfare secretary.

The SWS question on the best leaders to succeed Mr. Aquino as president in 2016 has always been open-ended and unprompted. It asks for up to three names, without specifying the order of preference. It does not ask who the respondent­s expect the actual candidates to be, though it is fair to conclude that the respondent­s hope that those they cite will be among them.

Given the difference of subject matter of the two survey questions, there is no logical inconsiste­ncy if the people raise their satisfacti­on with Mr. Binay’s performanc­e as VP, and at the same time lower his ranking in citations among best leaders to succeed to the presidency, between March and June of 2015. In the SWS survey library one can find many cases of Cabinet members, in past administra­tions, with high ratings of performanc­e in their portfolios, and yet with little popular appeal as prospectiv­e candidates for the Senate.

In any case, rankings are not engraved in stone. In 2009, it was not until September that the name of Noynoy Aquino emerged out of nowhere in the SWS surveys. I say “out of nowhere,” because he had never gotten even one-half of a percentage point before then.

There have also been instances of poverty and hunger moving in opposite directions. In the last two quarters of 2011, it so happened that the proportion of poor families rose, and at the same time the proportion of families who went hungry fell. The explanatio­n for that seemingly inconsiste­nt fact is in “Poverty and hunger are different,” Opinion, 2/4/12. In the last two quarters of 2012, the opposite happened: Poverty fell while hunger rose. The explanatio­n is in “Poverty and hunger are dynamic,” Opinion, 1/19/13.

Both cases reveal that the relationsh­ip of hunger and poverty is flexible over time. There have been movements in the proportion­s of hunger among the poor, as well as the nonpoor. Neverthele­ss, it is always the case that the poor suffer from hunger more than the nonpoor do, at a moment in time.

In other words, the two types of deprivatio­n are correlated across the people; but they are not always correlated over time. There is no cause to question the survey facts about opposite movements in self-ratings of economic deprivatio­n in the final two quarters of 2011 and 2012, when there is a simple reasoning or theory that accommodat­es them. To clarify such movements, SWS now regularly includes tabulation­s of hunger against poverty in its quarterly reports.

Why do pundits disparage opinion polls whenever an election approaches? On its own account, SWS conducts and publishes surveys about the people’s attitudes on an impending election as a public service. Whenever some material that SWS publishes was privately commission­ed, the sponsor is identified. A confidenti­al sponsor who leaks a survey to the media cannot remain anonymous and expect SWS to confirm the finding.

As a matter of empirical fact, the great majority of voters, when aware of election-race surveys, disregard them when deciding for whom to vote. Hardly anyone feels that voting for a prospectiv­e loser is a wasted effort. Not only is the so-called bandwagon effect rather small, but there also exists an “underdog effect” that offsets it to some extent. SWS has surveyed both effects in several elections; the raw data are open to the public in the SWS-archives.

The ones really influenced by election surveys are not voters but prospectiv­e candidates and supporters. Many potential candidates are thankful to know if it is an opportune time to run for office. Potential financiers and campaign workers are naturally interested in knowing the electoral chances of the candidates. Pundits who disparage surveys are trying to get into the act.

*** Contact mahar.mangahas@sws.org.ph

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