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High oil prices drive millions back to poverty in Philippines: survey

by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) March 5, 2008
Soaring oil prices and the rising cost of living have driven nearly four million people in the Philippines back into poverty, officials said Wednesday.

The number of Filipinos living on just one dollar a day rose from 23.8 million in 2003 to 27.6 million in 2006, according to a survey released by the economic planning ministry.

One in three Filipinos are living in poverty despite the modest economic gains in recent years.

Worst off were the Muslim regions in the country's south, troubled by rebellion and Islamic militancy, where between 60 and 70 percent of the population are poor.

The survey blamed rising oil prices, which have pushed up the cost of transport, which in turn has forced the cost of basic food items to rise.

Another factor contributing to rising poverty levels were wages, which have barely moved in the three-year period under review, and a series of deadly typhoons that struck the country in 2006.

"The failure to meet the most basic needs can be due to increasing prices and/or insufficient rise in personal income," Economic Planning Secretary Augusto Santos told a news conference.

He said that in the three years to 2006, prices had risen by 22 percent.

"External factors such as higher oil prices played a role in this scenario," he said.

"The government's commitment to solve the fiscal deficit also put upward initial pressure on inflation," he added.

Domingo Panganiban, an official of the government's National Anti-Poverty Commission, said four typhoons that hit the country between September and November 2006 had a "domino effect" of slowing business activities, forcing up food prices and raising the jobless rate.

Dolores Castillo, another commission official, said the government remains confident it can fulfil the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals of trimming poverty by half to about 16 percent in 2010.

"However ambitious these targets may seem, they are achievable as long as we sustain our momentum towards higher economic growth and ensure equitable distribution of wealth," Castillo said.

The Philippines posted a 31-year high economic growth of 7.3 percent in 2007, along with a 20-year low inflation of 2.8 percent.

Inflation, however, has been rising steadily this year. Data released Wednesday showed inflation at 5.4 percent in February, the highest since October 2006.

Former World Bank president James Wolfensohn, in the country for a series of lectures, said he was "quite struck" when he saw the statistics since previous figures showed the Philippines had been doing well in fighting poverty.

Manila should spend more on education, since the economy was expanding and the macroeconomic figures appeared to be good, he said.

In the long term, he said, "there are no secrets (to fighting poverty.) The question is political will."

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