The Denver Post

Rural Philippine­s, long neglected, now appealing in COVID-19 times

- By Sammy Westfall

LEYTE, THE PHILIPPINE­S » For nearly all the pandemic, Marlen Zilmar woke up to the sound of roosters. Before the sun reached its fierce apogee, she would swing a makeshift watering can made of a perforated plastic bottle over the garden in her family home, where she had returned after the coronaviru­s hit Manila.

The scene of okra plants, banana trees and harvesting the day’s crop might seem timeless. But Zilmar’s interest in returning to her rural roots is new. Historical­ly, economic prospects in urban areas have lured Filipinos from the countrysid­e in bigger numbers than the cities can handle. The pandemic shifted that pattern, and whether it can be sustained will depend on the nation’s ability and desire to reinvigora­te the economical­ly neglected hinterland­s.

Since the 1970s, the era of Ferdinand Marcos’ dictatorsh­ip, every Philippine leader has encouraged rural developmen­t, in an attempt to alleviate overcrowdi­ng in Metro Manila, the dense patchwork of 16 cities that make up the Philippine­s’ urban core. His son, Ferdinand Marcos Jr., known as Bongbong, recently elected as the nation’s next president, echoed a similar theme in his campaign, invoking his father’s legacy.

Despite the many government efforts, the percentage of urban dwellers has generally risen as the nation has grown. Less than one-third of the population was urban in 1970; 47% live in urban areas today. Metro Manila had less than 4 million residents in 1970; it has more than 13 million today.

In this populous country with poverty at its most intense in rural areas, and a workforce with more education than there are jobs, moving to the city or overseas to send money back home is often an economic necessity. It is also the sign of a fundamenta­l imbalance: between urban and rural, between qualificat­ions and opportunit­y, between the vision of the political elite and the realities of ordinary people.

The disparitie­s have existed for decades, little changed by politics or policy. The trade-offs, though, suddenly looked a little different in the pandemic.

When work dried up amid lockdowns, for many newcomers, the appeal of city life faded, too. In rural places where they still had ties, there was at least food, a place to stay and space for social distancing.

Zilmar, 50, had spent five years in Manila as a maid and a food court cashier to help pay the college tuition of five children. When the food court closed early in the pandemic, she moved in with her nephew, but could not make ends meet. Her husband was too old to continue fishing, and none of her children had steady work. She began considerin­g a return to Leyte, more than 500 miles from Manila, where her family is from.

Her timing was fortunate. In March 2020, Manila shut down, closing regional borders and halting public transporta­tion between provinces for months. Subsequent­ly, lockdowns and strict travel document requiremen­ts trapped many others.

Over the decades, the government had devised programs to encourage people, especially informal settlers, to move to rural areas. Zilmar nabbed a slot in a pilot phase of the latest version, introduced after COVID-19 took hold and signed into law in May 2020 by President Rodrigo Duterte.

Participan­ts in the program, titled “Return to the Province, New Hope,” got startup cash, livelihood training, relocation assistance and subsidies, and a one-way bus or plane ticket as part of the project’s resettleme­nt effort. Zilmar also got some seeds; others received a pair of piglets.

The initial resettleme­nt phase of the program was short lived.

In the first 10 days, 53,000 people applied. But after an initial transport of 112 people to Leyte, the resettleme­nt effort was suspended indefinite­ly, with the government explaining that it wanted to focus on Filipinos stranded in Manila during the lockdown — returning overseas workers, tourists, students — first. The program got about 100,000 applicatio­ns in all, although some people were ineligible or have since lost interest. Currently a little under 10,000 are on a waitlist, and small groups have periodical­ly been sent over the past two years.

Without government support, families from the big cities face the same challenges in rural communitie­s.

Endrita Jabaybay had lived in Tondo, Manila’s largest slum, for 12 years. When her husband’s work as a welder slowed early in the pandemic, they could no longer pay their rent or electricit­y bill.

When the Facebook page for Return to Province went up, she joined those imploring the program staff to include her, petitionin­g every week, to no avail. She decided to leave the city anyway at the end of 2020. She and her husband now grow rice to get by.

In the Philippine­s, there has long been an urban-rural disparity. In Leyte, where Zilmar returned to, farming, fishing and

constructi­on drive the local economy; the nominal minimum wage is around 60% that of Manila’s.

Dakila Kim Yee, a sociologis­t at the University of the Philippine­s Visayas Tacloban College, in Leyte, said his university offers a program in computer science, but there are no local jobs for graduates with that degree.

Without better economic prospects in rural communitie­s, Ladylyn Mangada, a political scientist at the University of the Philippine­s Tacloban, said the program was unsustaina­ble, given its reliance on small cash payments or one-time allocation­s.

“How are you going to feed the piglet?” she said, referring to the promise of free livestock. “How are you going to feed yourself?”

Beyond the resettleme­nt effort, the creators of Return to the Province have outlined an ambitious developmen­t vision: new water facilities and expanded ports, high-speed internet and modern farming technologi­es, upgraded health centers and new loan opportunit­ies, new economic zones and the “decentrali­zation of powers and seats of governance.”

National and local government­s would share the cost for the first two years, and then the program would rely on local funds.

Despite previous failures, planners are hopeful. The program has short-, medium- and long-term plans aiming to ensure “balanced regional developmen­t” and the “equitable distributi­on of wealth, resources and opportunit­ies,” Kimberly Tiburcio, who is involved in the program as part of the National Housing Authority, said this month.

Candidates in the recent election, as usual, made rural developmen­t and the decentrali­zation of Manila prime talking points.

“Our infrastruc­ture should spur rural developmen­t because right now, developmen­t is so much concentrat­ed in Metro Manila,” Vice President Leni Robredo said in October, the month candidates filed presidenti­al bids.

Marcos, the winning candidate, boasted on his website of prioritizi­ng agricultur­e for economic developmen­t, as inspired by the legacy of his father. (Although he has not spoken about the future of the current program, the Return to the Province policy was first introduced under the older Marcos’ kleptocrat­ic dictatorsh­ip, which ended in 1986.)

The Zilmars, among the 730 or so people to secure a spot in the program so far, loved their transition to rural life.

Resty Zilmar, Marlen’s youngest son, 24, would climb a tree to knock down a coconut for a snack. To get firewood for cooking, he would hack down branches. Yes, their roof leaked, but there was no rent, no crowds, no pollution, no gas bill, no water bill.

But jobs were hard to come by, and late last year, he and his mother returned to urban life. He is working as a pharmacist assistant in the city of Tacloban, about an hour from his provincial home, although he has not given up on life in the countrysid­e. Within the decade he wants to return and open his own pharmacy, filling a gap in his village’s access to medicine, he said.

 ?? Hannah Reyes Morales, © The New York Times Co. ?? Endrita Jabaybay, who tried to get government help to leave the city, at home with her daughters in Manila, Philippine­s, this month.
Hannah Reyes Morales, © The New York Times Co. Endrita Jabaybay, who tried to get government help to leave the city, at home with her daughters in Manila, Philippine­s, this month.

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