The Freeman

Most Filipinos relied on aid, savings, loans during quarantine

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Most Filipinos depended on government aid, spent personal savings or took out loans for their daily expenses during the quarantine, a Social Weather Stations survey suggests.

In a mobile survey conducted from May 4-10, the non-profit found that 39% of respondent­s used cash assistance — including from the government's social ameliorati­on program —vouchers and gift certificat­es, among others, for their daily expenses.

This, while 45% used the money they earned working, while the remaining 21% used what's left of their savings and 6% used money they loaned or borrowed.

"On the other hand, 6% of families say they do not spend money because they receive relief goods, and 2% say they do not spend money because they harvest their own crops. While these families are not spending money, it does not imply that all their needs have been met," the survey read.

The survey said that no choices were provided to respondent­s, who were allowed to give more than one answer.

It must be noted that there were widespread work suspension­s during the quarantine, which has been gradually relaxed since mid-May. Cebu City and the rest of the province are shifting to general community quarantine today until June 15.

With some 93,000 commercial establishm­ents temporaril­y shutting down, over 2.5 million Filipinos found themselves jobless over the twomonth coronaviru­s lockdown in the country, while the labor department has estimated that the number would climb to as high as 10 million.

Earlier in April, data from finance website Finder also discovered that 58% of Filipinos reported being unable to buy essential items amid the COVID-19 outbreak.

According to an earlier SWS survey release, four out of five Filipinos left the house at least once and at most thrice in the week before the survey was conducted for essentials. SWS also found that almost 90% of Filipinos are more afraid of getting and transmitti­ng COVID-19 compared to any other pathogen in the past.

As it stands, the administra­tion's response to the global pandemic has been rife with stories of delayed action, double standards in law enforcemen­t and incursions on dissent with some of the country's most vulnerable strata still bereft of government support to this day despite the chief executive holding special powers.

The Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t has admitted that its hands were tied when it came to the second tranche of its long-delayed social ameliorati­on aid distributi­on. Much of the blame has been passed onto local government­s, while the department continues to dodge questions from reporters.

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