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About 11.

4 million families remained poor in the first quarter of the year, while
some 7.9 million Filipinos rated themselves food-poor, according to the latest
Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey. AP PHOTO/AARON FAVILA

MANILA, Philippines–About
11.4 million families remained poor in the first quarter of the year, while some 7.9
million Filipinos rated themselves food-poor, according to the latest Social
Weather Stations (SWS) survey.

The survey, conducted from March 20 to 23 and first published in the


BusinessWorld newspaper, showed 51 percent who rated themselves poor,

unchanged from 52 percent, or 11.4 million families, who rated themselves poor in
the previous quarter.

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In the previous 18 surveys conducted during the Aquino administration, self-rated


poverty registered beyond 50 percent 11 times. The record-high 55 percent was
posted in March 2012, December 2013, June and September 2014, while the
record-low 45 percent was registered in December 2011.

Benjamin Diokno, an economics professor at the University of the Philippines, said


there has been no improvement in self-rated poverty, as one of two households
have considered themselves poor since 2010.

The SWS also found that 36 percent of respondents said they considered
themselves poor in terms of food, five points lower than the 41 percent, or an
estimated 9.1 million families, in December.

Lower inflation
Diokno said the slight improvement in the food poverty situation may be attributed
to lower inflation because of the sharp drop in world oil prices.

“Government authorities have nothing to do with cheaper oil and therefore cannot
claim credit for it,” he said.

The SWS asked heads of households to pick a


showcard that describes their family: Not poor, on the line or poor. Similar
showcards were used with questions asking about the type of food they eat.

Across areas, self-rated poverty decreased by 12 points in Metro Manila (31


percent from 43 percent) and a point in the rest of Luzon (44 percent from 45
percent), but went up slightly in the Visayas (70 percent from 65 percent) and
Mindanao (62 percent from 60 percent).

Self-rated food poverty slightly declined in the rest of Luzon (28 percent from 37
percent), Metro Manila (20 percent from 24 percent) and Visayas (45 percent from
51 percent) while it remained unchanged in Mindanao (52 percent).
The median self-rated poverty threshold in the rest of Luzon increased from P8,000
in December to P15,000 in March, while it remained unchanged in Mindanao
(P10,000).

In Metro Manila, the threshold declined from P20,000 to P15,000. It also went
down in the Visayas, from P12,000 to P10,000.

Meanwhile, the median self-rated food poverty threshold went up in the rest of
Luzon (P6,000 from P4,000) and Mindanao (P5,000 from P4,000), slightly
decreased in the Visayas (P4,750 from P5,000) and remained unchanged in Metro
Manila (P9,000).

The self-rated poverty threshold is defined as the monthly budget that households
need in order not to consider themselves poor, while self-rated food poverty is the
monthly food budget needed to consider themselves “not poor.”

The survey used face-to-face interviews with 1,200 respondents and had a margin
of error of plus-or-minus 3 percentage points.–Rafael L. Antonio, Inquirer
Research

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/689515/11-4m-families-remain-poor-sws-poll

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