Philippine Daily Inquirer

More PH families rate themselves as ‘poor’

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The number of Filipino families who rated themselves as “poor” slightly rose at the end of last year, as self-rated poverty worsened in Luzon outside Metro Manila while it fell in the rest of the country, according to a Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey conducted from Dec. 10 to Dec. 14, 2022.

Results of the December survey showed an estimated 12.9 million Filipino families or 51 percent of families in the country considered themselves as poor, an increase from 49 percent or 12.6 million families recorded in October 2022.

The uptick in self-rated poverty was due to the increase in Luzon outside of Metro Manila, from 36 percent in October to 49 percent in December, amid decreases in Metro Manila, from 44 percent to 32 percent; in the Visayas, from 68 percent to 58 percent; and Mindanao, from 64 percent to 59 percent.

Nearly a third or 31 percent rated themselves as borderline or placed themselves on a horizontal line dividing “poor” and “not poor” in December, up from 29 percent in October, while 19 percent rated themselves as “not poor,” down from 21 percent.

2M newly poor Pinoys

Of the estimated 12.9 million self-rated poor families in the latest survey, 2 million were newly poor or those who were nonpoor one to four years ago, 1.5 million were usually poor or those who were nonpoor five or more years ago and 9.4 million were always poor or those who never experience­d being nonpoor.

The fourth quarter survey used interviews of 1,200 adult respondent­s nationwide and a margin of error of plus-or-minus 2.5 percentage points for national percentage­s, plus-orminus 5.7 percentage points each for Metro Manila, Balance Luzon, the Visayas and Mindanao.

The respondent­s were also asked, “Based on the type of food eaten by your family, where would you place your family on this card? SWS found that 34 percent of families rating themselves as food-poor, 38 percent as food borderline and 28 percent as not food-poor.

Belt-tightening

Compared to June, the percentage­s of food-poor, food borderline and not food-poor families did not change.

The national median self-rated poverty threshold, the amount that a family needs in a month to not be considered poor, stayed at P15,000; while the self-rated poverty gap, the amount poor families lack in monthly home expenses relative to their stated threshold, fell from P6,000 in October 2022 to P5,000 in December 2022.

“The self-rated poverty threshold, or the minimum monthly budget self-rated poor families say they need for home expenses in order not to consider themselves poor, has remained sluggish for several years despite considerab­le inflation. This indicates that poor families have been lowering their living standards, i.e., belt-tightening,” SWS said.

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