Pidsdps 2106
Pidsdps 2106
Pidsdps 2106
The PIDS Discussion Paper Series constitutes studies that are preliminary and subject to further revisions. They are being circulated in a limited number of copies only for
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CONTACT US:
RESEARCH INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
Philippine Institute for Development Studies
Adoracion M. Navarro
Celia M. Reyes
Kris A. Francisco
February 2021
9
Abstract
This Common Country Assessment Update for the Philippines underpins the sustainable
development partnership framework for the Philippines and the United Nations. Taking off
from the analysis of the national baseline on sustainable development goals (SDGs) and
progress in the SDGs, this report employs the United Nation’s approach of framing the
sustainable development outcomes under three pillars, namely, people, prosperity and planet,
and peace. The report dissects the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) impacts and trajectories
of the sustainable development outcomes under each pillar. COVID-19 impacts are anticipated
to result in regression in human development capacities and opportunities. These are also
expected to thwart economic prosperity, change consumption behavior and affect the
environment. Delays in peacekeeping activities and fiscal resources realignments might also
affect the communities that are trying to recover from violence and armed conflicts, especially
in Mindanao. To mitigate further regression in development, the report recommends the
following, among others: for the people pillar, governance improvements in areas such as social
welfare programs delivery to vulnerable groups; for the prosperity and planet pillar, science-
based policy strategies that will consider the current problems exposed by the pandemic as well
as incorporate the timeliness of the policy responses; and for the peace pillar, the continued
cooperation between the national government and the Bangsamoro government in ensuring
that the recently gained peace dividends are protected and stakeholders do not slide back on
their commitments.
Key words: COVID-19, SDGs, human development, prosperity and planet, peace
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UN common country assessment update for the Philippines
1.1. Introduction
The Common Country Assessment (CCA) is a tool that provides grounding and direction for
the United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF). It is a
document that presents an overview of the trajectories of national outcomes over the years and
examines areas for improvement. In 2019, the United Nations released its Development
Assistance Framework (UNDAF, the predecessor of the UNSDCF) for the Philippines in a
document called the Partnership Framework for Sustainable Development (PFSD) 2019-2023,
which represents the transition of the UN system engagement in the Philippines from providing
development assistance to fostering a strategic partnership with the government. The PFSD
defines the priority areas of the UN system as an important partner of the Philippine
government, for the next five years, in congruence with the country’s own vision stated in
Ambisyon Natin 2040 and the targets laid out in the Philippine Development Plan (PDP) 2017-
2022. The PFSD largely embodies the UN System’s strategic support to national development
goals under the three pillars of partnership—people pillar, prosperity and planet pillar, and
peace pillar—and using the leave no behind framework. The CCA underpins the PFSD and the
last CCA for the Philippines was released in 2018.
This CCA is organized as follows. The rest of this introductory section discusses the purpose
of the CCA, the underlying assumptions, and the framework for analyzing the transmission of
impacts. Section 2 presents the general context and recent major developments which were not
contained in the previous CCA. This section already provides the discussion of the COVID-19
spread in the Philippines and the anticipated recovery, among other topics. Section 3 presents
the impacts of COVID-19 and the discussions are organized under the three pillars of the PFSD.
Section 4 discusses how the UN entities in the Philippines are supporting the government in
the COVID response and the possible ways forward in continuing that support. The last section,
Section 5, articulates the national priorities that are emerging from important documents that
have been produced so far by the government in crafting strategies to fight the pandemic and
identifies the opportunities for value addition by the UN in the Philippines.
1.2. Purpose
Given recent developments especially the Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and its
socio-economic impact, including the massive disruption to the economy and labor market, the
key assumptions and development trajectories envisaged in the PFSD 2019-2023, as well as
the CCA underpinning the PFSD, may no longer be valid. Underlying decent work deficits, as
well as vulnerabilities and inequalities in the labor market identified in the PFSD persist and
are exacerbated in the context of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). Thus, a CCA
This report was completed in December 2020 under a Contract between the PIDS and the United Nations
Development Programme.
1
Research Fellow, President, and Research Fellow, respectively, at the Philippine Institute for Development
Studies. The authors gratefully acknowledge the research assistance of Ms. Ronina Asis, Mr. Arkin Arboneda,
Ms. Anna Rita Vargas, and Mr. Jokkaz Latigar.
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Update is formulated. Since the last CCA was finalized in February 2018, the most recent full
year data that it had used are 2017 data and may no longer be responsive to the need for
informed decision-making.
This CCA aims to help the United Nations Country Team review the PFSD assumptions and
likely trajectories with a view to re-prioritizing its programme portfolio and applying its
collective capacities to support the Philippine government to successfully implement its
recovery plan and to:
a) stem possible significant regressions in progress towards the PDP, the 2030 Agenda
including the sustainable development goals (SDGs), and the Ambisyon Natin 2040;
b) leverage new potential opportunities to accelerate achievement of the SDGs;
c) ensure close alignment with revised government priorities for recovery and the
“better normal’; and
d) give stronger emphasis to the humanitarian, climate, peace, and development nexus,
including human rights and development principles contained in the No One Left
Behind framework of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.2
In addition, this CCA will serve as basis for the forthcoming UN Socioeconomic and
Peacebuilding Framework for COVID-19 Recovery in the Philippines. This Framework will
update the PFSD and function as the roadmap for the UN in the Philippines until a new
Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework is developed in 2023 that is aligned with
the development planning of a new administration.
1.3. Assumptions
This CCA assumes that the revised PFSD can be positioned as the contribution of the UN
Development system to support the Philippine government and the Filipino people in
recovering from the pandemic and to support long-term national aspirations, including
Ambisyon Natin 2040 which is envisioning a Filipino society in 2040 where no one is poor. It
also assumes that the Philippines, being a lower middle-income country, has a fair amount of
internal institutional capacity to achieve its aspirations and may only need UN support where
regression due to COVID-19 is likely to be most severe or where progress has been persistently
constrained. As the section discussing the UN support to the Philippines shows, the UN in the
Philippines continues to bring its comparative advantages through various support programs as
the country fights the pandemic.
The timing of the writing of the CCA occurred during the mid-term updating of the Philippine
Development Plan and the legislature’s deliberation of the proposed 2021 budget. At the time
the CCA was completed, the mid-term update of the PDP 2017-2022 has not yet been released
and Congress has not yet finished the budget deliberations. This CCA therefore assumes that
the national priorities for responding to COVID-19 going forward are as what are contained in
the executive branch’s version of the proposed 2021 budget, the action plan of the National
Task Force against COVID-19, and the President’s pronouncements. Nevertheless, some
discussions in this CCA give updates on the direction that the government is heading with
regard to budget prioritization for 2021.
2
As stated in the terms of reference for the preparation of this CCA.
12
This CCA also assumes that some of the points cited from other country analyses undertaken
by national institutions and development stakeholders underwent thorough vetting process and
are therefore valid. The references include but are not limited to: international financing
institutions’ analyses on SDG financing; reviews and recommendations of human rights
mechanisms; regional and cross-boundary assessments; and disaster risk profiles. The cited
materials are listed in the References list of this CCA.
As the COVID-19 pandemic is the major recent event that changes the trajectory of human
capability and sustainable development in the Philippines, this CCA traces the transmission
channels through which the pandemic affects development, describes the socioeconomic
impacts of the pandemic, and anticipates the likely recovery through actions needed to mitigate
further regression in development.
Real economy transmission of impacts of COVID-19 is happening both on the demand side
and the supply side. On the demand side, the lockdowns (called in the Philippines as
community quarantines which have varying levels3 that are being enforced by the Inter-Agency
Task Force for the Management of Emerging and Infectious Diseases or the IATF), the need
for physical distancing, and the low consumer confidence are all resulting in low opportunities
for economic activities and job disruption and loss of income and working hours of people and
firms. On the supply side, the low profitability of firms, the decisions to reduce production
levels or the variety of production, and the additional barriers to production are resulting in
high unemployment in certain sectors (particularly the industry and services sectors) and risk
aversion to investments, which again results in more unemployment. The pandemic also results
in disruption to education and training, hence, erosion of human capital due to lost
opportunities for education and training. Overall, these effects limit the capability of people to
support themselves, increase the share of workers seeking informal employment for their
livelihoods, and give rise to risks that human development capacities will regress, as the
simulation of human development index in a succeeding section of this CCA shows.
Migration and remittance channels are also affecting the trajectory of Philippine development
as a large number of migrant workers return and overseas Filipino workers’ remittance flows
show signs of decline. External receipts from tourism, and industry where many small and
medium enterprises participate, also show decline and are at risk of further decline if travel
restrictions continue and visitor confidence does not immediately recover. The financial market
effects of these flows at present are subdued by monetary actions but the real economy effects
are adverse implications on families that rely on remittances for their consumption spending.
At the macro level, the real economy effects on employment are seen in the worsening
3
The varying levels are enhanced community quarantine, which is the strictest, modified enhanced community quarantine,
general community quarantine, and modified general community quarantine or the least strict level.
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aggregate unemployment situation in the country. At the micro level, adjustments by firms and
workers are manifested not only in unemployment but also shorter working hours, lower
earnings, temporary suspensions, and conflicts in industrial relations due to unpaid wages and
dues, dismissals, and compliance issues.
The lower level of economic activity also affects fiscal policy as a transmission mechanism for
advancing human development and other socio-economic goals. Policymakers are confronted
with limited public resources in the face of high demand for public spending, especially on
health system capacity expansion and economic recovery programs, and they are now
contemplating on reprogramming, and perhaps de-prioritization, of certain expenditure
programs. The fiscal resources realignments might also affect the creation of socio-political
structures for Filipino communities that are trying to recover from violence and armed conflicts
and the building of social capital that enables them to have a more just and peaceful society.
The discussion in this section presents: a brief profile of the Philippines; the trajectory of
COVID-19 spread and the anticipated recovery, with particular focus on poverty implications;
the latest SDG results from official monitoring agencies; and the creation of the BARMM
which was not covered in the last CCA. The aim is to provide a general context to the next
section discussing the detailed impacts of COVID-19.
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Box 1. Quick facts
Geographic overview
• Archipelago of 7,641 islands. Three island groups: Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.
• Land territory: more than 300,000 sq.km.; coastline: 235,973 km. long. 2
• Prone to both geological and hydro-meteorological hazards and ranked the 9th most-at-risk country
among 180 countries assessed by the World Risk Report 2019.
Demographics
• Projected population in 2020 is 108.77 million.3
• Sex ratio (from 2015 census) is 102 males per 100 females.
• Fertility rate (in 2017) is 2.7, a steady drop from 6.0 children per woman in 1973.
• Urban areas have twice the population growth as rural areas.
Political administration
• Form of government: democratic republic, with power equally divided among the executive
branch, bicameral legislature, and judiciary.
• Senate: 24 senators, 17 males and 7 females; House of Representatives: 250 representatives, with
male to female ratio of 7 is to 3; Supreme Court: male chief justice and fourteen associate justices,
4 of whom are female
• Local government units (LGUs): 81 provinces, 146 cities, 1,488 municipalities, and 42,046
barangays.4 LGUs) are organized into 16 administrative regions and 1 autonomous region, the
Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.
Socio-economic overview
• Gross National Income per capita in 2019: USD 3,860.97.5 The country is considered “lower
middle-income” by the World Bank.6
• Poverty incidence: 16.7% of the population in 2018.
• On the demand side, primarily a consumption-driven economy with 72.4% of the total economy in
2019 attributed to household consumption.
• On the supply side, services sector drive growth as it accounted for 60% of value added in 2019.
Industry and agriculture contributed about 30% and 10%, respectively.
Notes:
Government of the Philippines. 2020. “About the Philippines” webpage. https://www.gov.ph/about-the-
philippines.
2
National Mapping and Resource Information Authority.
3
Based on demographic trends and the 2015 census of population. Unless otherwise indicated, all population
statistics are from the Philippine Statistics Authority.
4
Philippine Standard Geographic Code.
5
Applying the NEDA Board-DBCC employed exchange rate in 2019 of Php51.8 = USD1.0 to the Philippine
Statistics Authority data on 2019 GNI per capita of Php199,998.
6
The World Bank considers a country “lower middle income” if it has a per capita Gross National Income of
USD1,026 to USD3,995.
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Recent accomplishments under the Philippine Development Plan 2017-2022
The current administration is in the middle of implementing this six-year medium-term plan.
Comparing the actual accomplishments during the first half of the administration and the
original Philippine development planning assumptions, it can be concluded that overall, most
of the PDP targets that are measurable are being achieved, although these are now put at risk
by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, there were significant strides in making growth
more inclusive through reduction in poverty incidence. The full year 2018 Family
Income and Expenditure Survey (FIES) shows that overall incidence has declined
substantially and surpassed the PDP targets. Population poverty incidence in 2018 was 16.7
percent, lower than the PDP target of 17.3 percent to 19.3 percent; rural poverty incidence
was 24.5 percent, lower than the PDP target of 25.6 percent; and subsistence incidence was
5.2 percent, lower than the PDP target of 6.8 percent. Table 1 provides a summary of other
key indicators in the PDP. The achievement of the PDP targets up to the end of the
administration will significantly depend on the actual recovery post-COVID. The
projected recovery is discussed in the next sub-section.
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Table 1. Philippine Development Plan targets vs. actual accomplishments
17
74 out of 128 73 out of 73 out of 54 out of
Global Innovation Index (rank)
economies increasing increasing increasing 127 126 129
improved
(2016) economies economies economies
Note: r - revised
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2.2. COVID-19 trajectory and the anticipated recovery
Figure 1. Daily cases by onset of illness and daily confirmed deaths by date of death
Notes: 1. Bars with dark green colors indicate the actual date of onset or date of death for newly reported cases.
2. In cases where date of onset of illness is unreported, date of specimen collection was used as proxy.
Cases that do not have both are not accounted for in the date of onset histogram. Based on the daily
COVID-19 Philippine Situationer Report No. 227 issued on 10 December 2020, around 10% of cases
have unreported dates of specimen collection and onset of illness.
3. Owing to delays in reporting, case counts in the gray shaded area are still most likely incomplete.
Hence, the DOH urges caution in interpreting data beyond this 14-day cutoff.
4
In epidemiology, the trend in new cases daily is being assessed to see if the transmission curve is flattening or not. It is important
to note that “flattening the curve” is not a one-time event and transmission acceleration could recur.
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The slower transmission of the virus, per latest data, is a source of optimism. According
to the Department of Health (DOH), the time-varying reproduction number of the virus (Rt)
based on data validated as of 25 November 2020 is Rt = 0.95 +/- 0.02 with 95 percent
confidence interval, that is, the DOH is 95 percent confident that an average of 0.95 person
contracted COVID-19 after being exposed to an individual who contracted COVID-19 around
two weeks ago. The Rt was around 2.0 during the early days of the outbreak. The government’s
goal is for Rt to be less than 1 and sustain it, eventually stopping the transmission of SARS-
COV-2.
In terms of active cases, National Capital Region (NCR) or Metro Manila is the hotspot
of the virus as it has the highest number of active cases at 7,561. Table 2 below shows the
top 10 regions by active cases.
As the country imposed community quarantines or lockdowns to contain the virus, the
economy contracted. From 0.7 percent contraction in the first quarter of 2020, it
plummeted to 16.9 percent contraction in the second quarter, officially entering a
recession and bringing the first semester contraction to 9.3 percent. It started to recover
in the third quarter but contraction was still double-digit at 11.5 percent. Hardest hit was
the accommodation and food service activities, construction, and other services (particularly
the arts, entertainment and recreation industry) subsectors, which contracted in the third quarter
by 52.7 percent, 39.8 percent, and 53.4 percent, respectively. This was followed by transport
and storage, real estate, education, and mining and quarrying. A few sectors posted positive
growth. Financial and insurance activities posted 6.2 percent growth followed by public
administration and defense at 4.5 percent. (Note that there were no layoffs in government.)
Agriculture grew by 1.2 percent as the rural areas were not as affected by the community
quarantines as the urban areas. The long and stringent lockdowns have depressed economic
activities so much that the industry value added plunged to -21.8 percent in the second quarter
and -17.2 percent in the third quarter. Capital formation expenditure also significantly declined
by -53.7 percent in the second quarter and -41.6 percent in the third quarter. Unemployment
also dramatically rose to 17.7% in April before settling to 10% in July, which is still high
compared to the same month in 2019 (Philippine Statistics Authority, 2020).
5
CALABARZON stands for the provinces which consist Region IV-A, namely, Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon.
6
CAR means Cordillera Administrative Region.
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The government responses
The immediate fiscal response to the crisis is for the executive to seek Congressional authority
to reformulate the 2020 budget through a legislation called Bayanihan to Heal as One Act
(Republic Act No. 11469). 7 This allowed the realignment of a total of Php360.46 billion for
managing the health crisis.8 The pooled allocations were released to implementing agencies for
these purposes: implementation of the Social Amelioration Program, implementation of
various programs to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on affected disadvantaged/displaced
workers, Small Business Wage Support Program for micro-, small-, and medium-scale
enterprises (MSMEs), Bayanihan Grants to cities, municipalities and provinces, procurement
of reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) virus detection kits,
implementation of agriculture projects under the Ahon Lahat, Pagkain Sapat Kontra COVID-
19 Program,9 and operational budget requirements of the temporary treatment and monitoring
facilities for COVID-19 response. In particular, the SAP served as a lifeline to poor households
during the lockdowns as the law mandated the executive branch to provide a monthly subsidy
of Php5,000 to Php8,000 (varying based on the minimum wage per region) to around 18 million
low income households for two months.
The central bank, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, also contributed to the response through the
advance remittance of Php20 billion in dividends to the national government, and other
liquidity measures such as its Php300-billion repurchase agreement with the national
government and the opening of a window for purchases of government securities in the
secondary market. The monetary board also eased its monetary policy through a 50-basis-point
reduction on June 25, which brought the policy rate to 2.25 percent. To reduce the financial
burden on loans to micro, small and medium-scale enterprises (MSMEs), the monetary board
also made it a policy that banks’ loans to MSMEs and large enterprises that are not part of
conglomerate structure shall be counted as part of the banks’ compliance with reserve
requirements. According to BSP data, around Php71.0 billion in MSME loans were used as
compliance with the reserve requirements.
The first Bayanihan Act was in effect up to 25 June 2020. To be able to continue responding
to the pandemic through reprogramming of the 2020 budget, the executive asked Congress to
enact a second Bayanihan Act, which the latter did on 12 September 2020. Bayanihan 2
(Republic Act No. 11494) provides for a stimulus package worth P165 billion, consisting of
P140 billion in regular appropriation and P25 billion as standby fund. The biggest share of the
P165-billion budget is allotted for soft loans to badly hit groups such as MSMEs, transport,
tourism and agriculture sectors. The law also allots funds for health-related responses,
including the retroactive payment of the P100,000 hazard duty pay for health workers, the
continuous employment of existing emergency health workers, augmentation of operations of
DOH hospitals, risk allowance of public and private health workers attending to COVID-19
patients, procurement of face masks, face shields and personal protective equipment (PPEs),
7
The term “bayanihan” in Filipino means to help as a community, that is, one community helping the most in need in that
community.
8
From the Department of Budget and Management, as of 30 June 2020:
Net Releases under Section 4(v) of RA 11469 = Php252,622,052,356
Net Releases under Section 4(x) of RA 11469 = Php11,115,891,854.25
Net Releases under Section 4(y) of RA 11469 = Php96,717,896,630
Total Releases = Php360,455,840,840.25.
9
Ahon Lahat, Pagkain Sapat Kontra COVID-19 can be approximately translated as “Arise all, enough food for all to counter
COVID-19”.
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and construction of temporary medical isolation and quarantine facilities. The law also
allocates subsidies and allowances to qualified students in both private and public elementary
schools, high schools, and colleges whose families were affected by work stoppage amid the
lockdowns imposed, and one-time cash aid to displaced teaching and non-teaching personnel
who have lost their jobs or who have not received their wages because of the coronavirus crisis.
Bayanihan 2 authorizes the reprogramming and realignment of funds not only by the national
government but also by LGUs. It also suspends the application of personnel services cap on
LGUs to enable them to hire more personnel for COVID response and recovery. It also
authorizes the grant of financial and investment privileges like 60-day grace period for payment
of loans, priority lending for MSMEs through government financing institutions, exemption
from import duties for PPEs, removal of initial public offering tax, waiver of national permits,
licenses, and certificates for public and private projects that are nationally significant, and two-
year exemption from compulsory notification for mergers and acquisitions with transaction
values below Php50 billion and one-year exemption from motu propio investigation. The law,
however, no longer provides SAP to poor households except to those qualified beneficiaries
who were not able to access the SAP under Bayanihan 1.
The government’s projection of the anticipated recovery shows that despite the double-
digit contractions for two consecutive quarters, the government is assuming a rapid
return to a high growth trajectory next year, that is, a V-shaped recovery, and an
accelerated growth in 2022. The most recent macroeconomic assumptions of the government
are in Table 3.
Given the revised growth assumptions, the government also revised its fiscal projections for
budget programming and funds sourcing purposes. Table 4 shows the revised fiscal projections.
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Disbursements (in billion pesos) 4,233.7 4,662.3 4,954.6
% of GDP 23.3 23.3 22.1
Surplus/ (Deficit) (in billion pesos) (1,380.3) (1,780.8) (1,641.0)
% of GDP -7.6 -8.9 -7.3
Source: NEDA Board-DBCC, 03 December 2020
The projected deficit implies the need for additional borrowings, which the government will
try to meet through a foreign and domestic debt mix of 26 percent foreign debt and 74 percent
domestic debt in 2020, and 15 percent foreign debt and 85 percent domestic debt in 2021. (The
target debt mix for 2021 has not yet been released.) The government claims that the borrowing
strategy will keep the debt-to-GDP ratio at a sustainable level of below 50 percent. Before the
COVID-19 pandemic, the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio was only 39.6 percent.
As long as the virus transmission is not contained and adequately managed and the
current system of sweeping lockdowns at the higher level of geographic areas (regions,
provinces, metropolises) continues, recovery will be difficult and slow and may trace a U-
shaped recovery rather than the V-shaped recovery that the government is projecting,
with grim implications for poverty. Although the government has started to impose what it
calls “granular lockdowns” or restrictions at the level of barangays, strict lockdown
classifications at the levels of cities and provinces continue to be imposed, revisited, and then
re-adjusted every two weeks. These have severe public transport restrictions and business
closure implications because under the strictest category of “enhanced community quarantine
(ECQ)” public transport is suspended and 50% operating capacity is imposed on many types
of businesses, and under the “modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ)”, which is a
transitory phase toward a less stringent “general community quarantine”, public transport
remains suspended and a significant number of establishment types remain under 50%
operating capacity restriction.10
The overall effects of the community quarantine restrictions include hardships for workers in
getting to and from workplaces and instability in business planning and high uncertainty on
opening or closure decisions for firms. This is most prominent in the National Capital Region
10
For full details on the list of restrictions per quarantine classification, see the “Omnibus Guidelines on the Implementation of
Community Quarantine in the Philippines” as of 08 October 2020 at
https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/downloads/2020/10oct/20201008-IATF-Omnibus-Guidelines-RRD.pdf.
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(NCR) or Metro Manila, which accounts for 36% of the country’s GDP, as the region had been
under the longest alternating ECQ and MECQ impositions since mid-March. It was only on
June 1 when it was put under GCQ, allowing public transportation and the opening of most
businesses, but then it had to be put under a two-week MECQ again on August 4 to 18 when
medical front-liners called for a “breathing space” given the surge in cases, after which the
quarantine was reverted to GCQ status (up to the time of this writing).
As a result of the lockdowns, household incomes went down, contributing to increase in income
poverty, which may be captured by official government data only in 2021, the next Family
Income and Expenditure Survey. Thus, a poverty impact simulation was done for this CCA.
For this CCA, simulations were done to estimate the impact of the pandemic on poverty
based on the 9 percent economic contraction scenario in 2020. Note that this is the mid-
point of the government’s projection for 2020, which is more pessimistic than international
financing institutions’ projections for 2020.
The simulations assumed that the income of the family is linked to the sector of employment
of the household head. The simulations also considered that the government provided cash
transfers under the Social Amelioration Program (SAP) to smoothen the consumption of the
poor and vulnerable. The SAP is mandated to provide a cash or non-cash subsidy to 18 million
household beneficiaries in the amount of at least Php5,000 to a maximum of Php8,000 per
month for two months for basic food, medicine and toiletries. The amount of assistance
received depended on the region where the beneficiary was located, as shown in the table
below. It was assumed in the simulation that the SAP beneficiaries covered the poorest and
low-income families. The program is designed to cover 18 million beneficiaries, representing
73 percent of the total number of families. However, recent reports mention that only about 14
million received two tranches, representing 57 percent of the families. According to the
DSWD, the target beneficiaries for the second tranche was trimmed down to 14 million families
to account for duplicates, listed but ineligible beneficiaries, and families who voluntarily
returned their cash aid. Thus, different simulations were done assuming SAP delivery to the
target 18 million household beneficiaries and the 14 million beneficiaries to date. For the
simulations, it was assumed that the families who received two tranches are the 14 million
families with the lowest incomes.
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Region VII (Central Visayas) 404 6,000
Region VIII (Eastern Visayas) 315 5,000
Region IX (Zamboanga Peninsula) 316 5,000
Region X (Northern Mindanao) 365 6,000
Region XI (Davao) 396 6,000
Region XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) 326 5,000
Region XIII (Caraga) 320 5,000
Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in
325 5,000
Muslim Mindanao
The simulation results suggest that around 1.44 million families covering about 7.53 million
individuals will become poor as a result of the pandemic. The SAP reduces the number of new
poor to 400 thousand families or 2.82 million individuals. Clearly, given the projected
economic performance, poverty will increase despite the presence of the SAP. The magnitude
and incidence of poverty incidence do not change whether there are 14 million or 18 million
beneficiaries because those belonging to the top 50 percent of the families are non-poor.
Despite the declines in income due to the pandemic, they remained non-poor.
The simulations suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic will increase the number of poor,
but social protection in the form of SAP will temporarily help the families. Since the SAP
is temporary, other measures such as wage subsidies or cheap loans are needed to enable those
who lost their jobs or closed their businesses to bounce back from the crisis. If they do not
recover quickly, the new poor can become part of the chronic poor. The new poor may also
adopt coping mechanisms that may have adverse impact on other dimensions of welfare. For
instance, some of the new poor may withdraw their children from school and this would have
longer-term implications on the welfare of the household. Therefore, it is important to ensure
that the recovery process for the economy is inclusive.
A separate simulation, done outside this CCA, shows that even a 5 percent income contraction
across all income groups will increase the current poverty rate to 19.2 percent, or will result in
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additional 2.6 million of Filipino families becoming poor (Albert et al., 2020). But social
amelioration and small business wage subsidy programs, assuming these go to the 75th to 90th
percentiles of households across per capita income distribution, can become effective in
evading this scenario and can even result in a reduction of poverty incidence to 15.5 percent.
These simulations underscore the importance of social protection programs in the time
of COVID-19, and yet the Philippines does not seem to be spending enough for these
relative to its peers in Southeast Asia. An ADB database tracks the fiscal responses to
COVID-19 of its member countries and estimates the “total COVID policy response package”
as composed of the following measures: liquidity support, credit creation, direct long-term
lending, equity support, and government support to income or revenue. Based on the October
19 version of the database, the Philippines’ total policy response package as a percentage of
2019 GDP is only 5.8 percent, fourth from the bottom among ASEAN countries (Figure 2).
Assessing the policy response package per capita with due consideration for the number of
COVID-19 cases per million shows that the Philippines is facing the second highest number of
cases per million, and yet its spending is not commensurate with the level of the problem. It
may be argued that other countries can afford to spend more than what the Philippines does
because they are relatively more affluent. However, even after adjusting for the size of the
economy, the Philippines still comes out parsimonious relative to its peers in GDP per capita
standing like Indonesia and Vietnam (Figure 3). On the ground, a concrete translation of this
parsimony is the withdrawal of the SAP in the Bayanihan 2 even as the poor segments of
Filipino society continue to suffer from sweeping and broad lockdowns with public
transportation restrictions that restrict the mobility of workers.
Figure 2. Total COVID policy response package as percentage of 2019 GDP in ASEAN
Note: Total COVID policy response package is composed of the following measures: liquidity support, credit
creation, direct long-term lending, equity support, and government support to income/revenue.
26
Figure 3. COVID-19 cases and policy response package per capita in ASEAN
Notes:
1. Total COVID policy response package is composed of the following measures: liquidity support, credit
creation, direct long-term lending, equity support, and government support to income/revenue.
2. The size of each bubble denotes the corresponding economy’s GDP per capita.
Aside from the level of fiscal spending, factors affecting the successes of nearby economies
should also be considered by the Philippines. The World Bank (2020) reported that East Asia
Pacific countries, except the Philippines and Indonesia which are still struggling to contain the
virus, have so far suffered less from COVID-19. What has helped contain the disease thus far
are early and decisive action, smart lockdowns or containment based on extensive testing,
economic measures such as sick pay to encourage sick people to stay at home, and clear and
consistent communication. The World Bank also reported that as of September, Vietnam
appeared to have resumed economic activities soon after successful containment, and Malaysia
and Thailand had their mobility data close to January levels. Box 2 discusses what lessons can
be learned by the Philippines from the early successes of Vietnam in reaping the containment
dividend.
Box 2. Early successes from Vietnam offer lessons for the Philippines
The Vietnam experience is a good case study. Vietnam is one of the countries which experienced
an initial surge of cases but as of 13 October 2020, the number cases is only 1,122. In contrast,
the Philippines has 342,816 cases and ranked 18th highest in the world.
According to IMF analysts (Dabla-Norris et al., 2020), Vietnam’s strategy was informed by its
experience with the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in 2003 when effective and
transparent communications were implemented and the support of the military, public security
services, and grass-root organizations was swiftly deployed. When the COVID-19 outbreak in
China was officially reported to the World Health Organization on December 31, 2019, Vietnam
again swiftly acted and before January 2020 ended, it had already issued a guidance on outbreak
prevention and detection, crafted a National Response Plan, and established a National Steering
27
Committee on Epidemic Prevention. It also adopted strict containment measures including travel
bans on foreign visitors and a 14-day quarantine period for international arrivals. It was not able
to conduct the same level of mass testing that most advanced economies did but it used extensive
contact tracing, isolation and quarantining. Up to third-tier of traced contacts were quarantined
and groups of people who lived near confirmed cases were swiftly tested and isolated. Existing
public and military facilities were used in early containment. Treatment and quarantine in
hospitals were provided free of charge. A well-coordinated and multi-media approach in
communications from the very early stage brought critical public buy-in. This involved
communicating through mass media, a government website, public grass-root organizations,
posters, mobile phone text messages, voice messages before a phone call could be made.
Domestic economic activity in Vietnam is now showing early signs of renewed consumer
confidence as retail trade has been showing a sharp recovery.
The Philippines integrated the sustainable development goals (SDGs) in the PDP 2017-2022
and recognizes that the SDGs are in sync with the long-term vision articulated in Ambisyon
Natin 2040 where no Filipino is poor by 2040. The country is monitoring the achievement of
the SDGs through the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA),11 which has generated the baseline
and is publishing its results through the webpage SDG Watch on its website. In accordance
with PSA Board approval in May 2017, the PSA is officially monitoring through the
participation of many agencies 155 National SDG Tier 1 indicators, composed of 102 SDG
global indicators, 28 proxy indicators, and 25 supplementary indicators.
The Philippines also completed its second Voluntary National Review (VNR)12 in 2019.
Presented to the United Nations High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development, with
the theme “Empowering people and ensuring inclusiveness and equality”, in July 2019 and
published in the Philippines in November 2019, the VNR reports the country’s efforts in
adopting the 2030 Agenda and where the country stands in six sets of global sustainable
development goals: SDG 4 (quality education), SDG 8 (decent work and economic growth),
SDG 10 (reduced inequalities), SDG 13 (climate action), SDG 16 (peace, justice and strong
institutions), and SDG 17 (partnerships) (Reyes et al., 2019).
The baseline and the progress on all the SDGs for all the 155 indicators that the PSA is
monitoring are detailed in Annex A of this CCA. Updating was undertaken by the PSA in
March 2020 and the data provided by various national government agencies to the PSA pertain
to the status of the indicators before the COVID-19 pandemic.13 Thus, the discussion below
broadly provides the national implementation progress before the pandemic based on selected
benchmark indicators. (For details on other indicators, the reader is invited to peruse Annex
A.) Nonetheless, the trends in national implementation progress already shows which
SDG sub-indicators are off-track and will be exacerbated by the pandemic, which are at
risk of regressing, and which show potential gains in the time of COVID-19.
11
For this purpose, the PSA Board issued Resolution No. 9 Series of 2017: Approving and Adopting the Initial List of SDGs for
Monitoring in the Philippines.
12
The first VNR was conducted in 2016.
13
Producing an update for the SDG indicators where the government set baselines (155 indicators) is not an easy task (inside
the government, it has to be undertaken by multiple agencies with many staff) and this portion of the CCA undertaking was
confronted with limited time and manpower.
28
Some indicators were off-track even before COVID
The country has been off-track with respect to important sub-indicators under the
following SDGs and prioritizing them will also facilitate the response to the pandemic.
● SDG 2 (no hunger): slow improvement in stunting and wasting of children, increased
number of overweight children
● SDG 3 (health): increased vulnerability to HIV, lower percentage of public health
facilities properly stocked with selected essential medicines
● SDG 6 (access to water and sanitation): implementation effort on sustainable
management of water and sanitation declined, household access to sanitation declined
● SDG 12 (sustainable consumption and production): hazardous waste generated per
capita increased
● SDG 10 (reduced inequality): regional income disparities and rural poverty persist
● SDG 16 (peace, justice and strong institutions): deterioration in performance in the
World Justice Project Rule of Law Index, including fundamental human rights, and in
certain components of the Worldwide Governance Indicators
Food insecurity becomes more intense with the economic contraction and loss of jobs and
livelihoods in the time of COVID-19 and it can be worse in areas where inequality and rural
poverty are severe, with dire consequences for the nutrition of children. The existing low
readiness of public health facilities and deterioration of non-COVID health efforts like those
related to HIV are indicative of weaknesses in the health sector that make responding to the
pandemic especially difficult. Poor access to clean water and improved sanitation weakens the
health strategies to fight the pandemic especially in rural areas. The increase in hazardous waste
generation is symptomatic of the slow traction in extracting accountability from polluting firms
and changing the general behavior toward handling hazardous waste as threats to health, which
is a much needed behavioral change during the pandemic. Weaknesses in governance and
safeguarding of fundamental human rights can also complicate the pandemic response as these
can erode trust and cooperation of the citizenry at a time when such are badly needed.
The off-track path also implies that left behind groups with respect to these SDG sub-
indicators were starting from a more disadvantaged position when the pandemic struck,
and the lockdowns and consequent economic and political hardships brought them
additional misery. Social protection should therefore adequately target these groups.
The rest of the discussion below provides the numbers for the pre-COVID trends on the
mentioned SDG dimensions.
On SDG 2 (no hunger), the Philippines exhibits slow progress. In 2015, only about a third of
Filipino households (31 percent) meet the 100 percent recommended energy intake. Stunting
and wasting continue to be serious problems. There were only small improvements in stunting
and wasting among children as the prevalence of stunting among children under 5 years of age
declined only slightly from 33.4 percent in 2015 to 30.3 percent in 2018, and the prevalence of
wasting among children under 5 years of age declined from 7.1 percent in 2015 to 5.6 percent
in 2018. Moreover, the prevalence of being overweight among children under 5 years of age
worsened from 3.9 percent in 2015 to 4 percent in 2018.
The monitoring of good health and well-being under SDG 3 shows improved health care but
the increasing number of HIV cases and availability of medicines in public health facilities are
a cause for concern. According to the 2017 National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS),
29
the Philippines had expanded health care access for mothers and infants, with the proportion
of births handled by skilled personnel at 84.4 percent (an improvement from 73 percent per the
2013 NDHS) and the proportion of births delivered in a health facility at 77.7 percent (an
improvement from 61 percent per the 2013 NDHS). The country is also near the achievement
of the 2030 goal of reducing neonatal mortality to at least as low as 12 per 1,000 live births and
mortality of children under 5 years of age to as low as 25 per 1,000 live births. In 2017, neonatal
mortality in the Philippines was 14 per 1,000 live births and under-5 mortality was 27 per 1,000
live births. Mortality rates attributed to cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes or chronic
respiratory disease slightly declined from 4.6 in 2016 to 4.5 in 2018. However, vulnerability to
HIV is worsening. As reported by the SDG Watch, there were 9,264 new cases in 2016 and
11,427 new cases in 2018, and as reported by the Department of Health in December 2019,
new cases dramatically grew to 74,807. Moreover, the percentage of public health facilities
properly stocked with selected essential medicines declined from 65.4% in 2016 to 55% in
2019.
Efforts continue to ensure the availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation,
which is SDG 6, but implementation effort declined. The proportion of monitored bodies of
water with good ambient water quality was registered in 2016 as 82.3 percent for dissolved
oxygen monitoring and 79.5 percent for biochemical oxygen demand monitoring. There was a
decline in implementation effort as the percentage of implementation of programs and projects
identified in integrated river basin master plans declined from 26.1 percent in 2016 to 21.2
percent in 2019. Moreover, the amount of water- and sanitation-related official development
assistance (ODA) that is part of a government-coordinated spending plan through the Local
Water Utilities Administration slightly declined from USD62 million in 2016 to USD60
million in 2019. Although not part of the monitored indicators under SDG 6 but part of those
monitored under SDG 1 (No poverty), the trend in households’ access to water and sanitation
is also instructive. The report on the national progress shows a slight improvement in the
proportion of families with access to improved water supply, from 83.2% in 2016 to 86.4% in
2017, but the proportion of population living in households with access to sanitary facilities
declined, from 91.9% in 2016 to 89.2% in 2017.
For the SDG on sustainable consumption and production patterns or SDG 12, the indicator
included in the SDG Watch is only about hazardous waste generation and the situation is far
from satisfactory. Hazardous waste generated per capita by industries was 0.0145 metric tons
in 2016 and increased to 0.0427 metric tons in 2017.
On SDG 10 (reducing inequalities), the average household income per capita of the bottom 40
percent of the population grew faster than that of the general population. According to the 2018
Family Income and Expenditure Survey (FIES), the 2018 household income per capita of the
bottom 40 percent grew at 10.4 percent whereas for the total population, household income per
capita grew at 6.5 percent. However, regional income disparities are stark and poverty remains
a rural phenomenon. Poverty incidence in the poorest region, the Autonomous Region of
Muslim Mindanao, was 61.3 percent in 2018 whereas it was 2.2 percent in the National Capital
Region. Rural poverty was 24.46 percent and urban poverty was 9.30 percent in 2018.
On SDG 16 (peace, justice and strong institutions), the SDG Watch reported reduced number
of victims of homicide, number of murder cases, and index crime rate from 2016 to 2018.
However, the VNR reported that the number of rape cases actually increased from 2009 to
2018, though it is unclear whether this is due to increased reporting rather than absolute
increase in occurrences of rape. With respect to corruption, data show slight reductions in
30
bribery for instances of availing social services, accessing justice, securing registry documents
and licenses, and any service, but the bribery related to payment of taxes and duties increased.
Note that there are indicators under monitoring elsewhere that tackle the themes of SDG 16
although these are not covered under the SDG indicators baseline and updating committed in
the Philippine SDG Watch. In particular, monitoring by the Philippine Statistics Authority of
the Philippine Development Plan targets through its StatDev webpage14 uses the World Justice
Project (WJP) Rule of Law Index with indices in 2016 as baseline. The WJP Rule of Law Index
2020 report shows that the country’s score on fundamental rights is 0.41 and is ranked 107th
out of 128 countries.15 This is a deterioration from its 2016 score of 0.5 and global rank of 83rd
out of 113 countries. Its score on civil justice in 2020 is 0.46 and it is ranked 92nd out of 128
countries, which is a slight deterioration from its 2016 score of 0.45 and rank of 87th out of
113 countries. Its score on criminal justice in 2020 is 0.31 and it is ranked 112th out of 128
countries, which is also a deterioration from its 2016 score of 0.45 and rank of 87th out of 113
countries. A report by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (HCHR) in June 2020
also highlighted that while important human rights gains in the Philippines have been made
and challenges remain, there are critical ongoing human rights issues. For instance, in the
Philippine National Police’s fight against illegal drugs, the Supreme Court noted that
operations by the police and homicides perpetrated by unidentified persons resulted in 20,322
deaths from 01 July 2016 to 27 November 2017, which prompted the Supreme Court to demand
an explanation for the staggering average of 40 deaths a day. Moreover, the HCHR examination
of police reports found that the police had repeatedly recovered guns bearing the same serial
numbers, or guns reappearing in different crime scenes, suggesting planting of evidence. 16
Related to SDG 16 but is not in the SDG Watch are the country’s scores in the World Bank’s
Worldwide Governance Indicators 2019,17 which the Philippine Statistics Authority’s StatDev
also uses as reference. It shows deterioration in voice and accountability, rule of law, and
control of corruption (Table 7).
14
See StatDev webpage on https://psa.gov.ph/statdev-main which monitors the achievement of Philippine Development Plan
targets.
15
Scores range from 0 to 1, where 1 indicates full adherence to the rule of law.
16
Situation of human rights in the Philippines: Report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. 29 June 2020.
https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Countries/PH/Philippines-HRC44-AEV.pdf
17
Estimates of governance in six broad dimensions, namely, voice and accountability, political stability and absence of violence,
government effectiveness, regulatory quality, rule of law, and control of corruption, range from approximately -2.5 (weak) to 2.5
(strong) governance performance.
31
Some gains are at risk of regressing due to COVID
Pre-COVID, there were clear positive gains in some sub-indicators in the following goals
although there were mixed results in others. However, the hard-earned gains are at risk
of regressing if the response and recovery efforts are not handled well.
Significant progress in poverty reduction, the bedrock of all SDGs, is among the recent key
accomplishments of the Philippines but it is now evident that this is a fragile progress due to
the pandemic. Access to education and learners’ completion rates also improved and higher
education and TVET quality progressed but basic education quality remains a problem and will
be exacerbated by the inequality in access to ICT infrastructure. Narrowing the gender gap in
economic opportunities is also one of the key accomplishments of the Philippines but
continuing violence against women and children blots this accomplishment and can worsen
under lockdowns due to COVID. The progress in the general unemployment situation in recent
years was also reversed during the pandemic as the lockdowns resulted in very high
unemployment. SDG 4 has an important interaction with this because if access to and the
quality of higher education and TVET will be improved further, unemployment risks could be
partly mitigated. For the economic growth recovery, the recent progress in the country’s
innovation standing will be useful but it is still crucial to improve the woeful state of the
country’s infrastructure and employ strategies to move up across the industry value chain.
Infrastructure is also crucial in the pursuit of sustainable communities because although local
governments have improved in terms of disaster risk reduction strategies, there remain gaps in
evacuation center construction and decent housing for informal settlers.
The discussion below provides the pre-COVID numbers on the mentioned SDG dimensions
and sets the general context of the discussion in the section on COVID impacts.
With respect to SDG 1 (end poverty in all its forms), the proportion of Filipinos with incomes
below the international poverty line of USD1.90 per day (in 2011 purchasing power parity
prices) is estimated by the World Bank at 6 percent in 2015. If one is to use national definitions,
the proportion of poor Filipinos living below the national poverty line was 23.5 percent in 2015
and decreased to 16.7 percent in 2018. Moreover, poverty in rural areas is greater than in urban
areas and poverty reduction has been slower in rural areas than in urban areas. The proportion
of population living below the national poverty line in rural areas was 34 percent in 2015 and
declined to 24.5 percent in 2018 (a reduction of 27.9 percent), whereas in urban areas, it was
13.2 percent in 2015 and declined to 9.3 percent in 2018 (a reduction of 29.5 percent). Although
not yet part of the SDG monitoring, multi-dimensional poverty as measured by the PSA in
32
2018 also revealed improvements—the multidimensional poverty index for Filipinos declined
from 23.9% in 2016 to 17.3% in 2017. In this initial estimation, the PSA considered 13
indicators spread across four dimensions: education dimension, health and nutrition dimension,
housing, water and sanitation dimension, and employment dimension.18
On SDG 4 (pursuit of quality education), the VNR shows that various performance indicators
in basic education and secondary education, such as completion and cohort survival rates, have
significantly improved. Completion rate for elementary education improved from 93.1 percent
in 2016 to 97.2 in 2018, and for secondary education, improved from 80.9 precent in 2016 to
88.4 percent in 2018. Cohort survival rate, on the other hand, improved for elementary
education from 93.8 percent in 2016 to 97.4 percent in 2018, and for secondary education, from
83.1 percent in 2016 to 89.5 percent in 2018. Dropout rates or school leavers rates are also
declining. Dropout rate in elementary education fell from 1.5 percent in 2016 to 0.5 percent in
2018, and in secondary education, from 6.2 percent in 2016 to 3.4 percent in 2018. In higher
education, access improved when the Philippines implemented a free tuition policy in public
colleges and universities starting in academic year 2017-2018. Technical, vocational education
and training (TVET) in public institutions has also been free since 2018. Improvements in
higher education and TVET quality have also been observed as the passing rate in licensure
exam for higher education increased from 37.6 percent in 2016 to 37.9 percent in 2018 and the
certification rate for TVET increased from 91.9 percent in 2016 to 94.3 percent in 2019. With
respect to gender disparities in access to education, gender parity indices are near one at the
primary and secondary levels. But the gender gap widens and in favor of girls in tertiary
education, with the ratio of girls to boys at 1.2 both in 2016 and 2018.
However, although not part of the SDG Watch official monitoring, the country’s performance
in the 2018 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) should be taken into
account because it reflects serious issues in the quality of basic education. Released in
December 2019 for the 79 participating member and partner countries of the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the results showed symptoms of basic
education quality problems as the Philippines ranked at the bottom in reading and second
lowest in both mathematics and science.19 In relation to this, as the Department of Education
shifts to a blended mode of education where online learning is a major component, quality
problems are exacerbated by the inequality in access to ICT infrastructure. Only 17.7% of
households have their own internet access at home according to the 2019 National ICT
Household Survey.
On SDG 5 (gender equality), official SDG Watch monitoring shows that the number of reported
gender-based violence, which is based on administrative data, declined from 60,755 in 2016 to
39,675 in 2018. This of course is not enough as the goal should be eliminating violence against
women and girls, which was reported to be 14.7% prevalent according to survey data (more
specifically, the 2017 NDHS survey data showed 14.7% of ever-partnered women and girls 15
years and older were subjected to physical, sexual or psychological violence by a current or
former intimate partner in the previous 12 months before the survey date). The SDG Watch
also shows that the attainment of gender equality has been strong in the aspect of enjoyment of
economic opportunities but is mixed with respect to representation in government. More than
half (50.5 percent) of managerial positions in the country are held by women in 2019. However,
18
Philippine Statistics Authority. 2018. Press Release 2018-187 on Multi-dimensional Poverty Index. https://psa.gov.ph/psa-
press-release-tags/multidimensional-poverty-index-mpi.
19
Department of Education. 2019. PISA 2018: National Report of the Philippines. https://www.deped.gov.ph/wp-
content/uploads/2019/12/PISA-2018-Philippine-National-Report.pdf
33
there has been unchanged representation by women in the national parliament from 2016 to
2019 at 28.7 percent, and there was a slight deterioration in the representation at the local
government level as the proportion of seats held by women in local governments declined from
31 percent in 2016 to 28.7 percent in 2019.
Outside the SDG Watch indicators, the results from the World Economic Forum (WEF)’s
Global Gender Gap Index are also enlightening. According to the 2020 Global Gender Gap
Report, the overall gender gap in the Philippines has been decreasing as it garnered a score of
0.781 and maintained its being second ranked (next to first ranked New Zealand) in terms of
narrowing the gender gap among 20 countries in the East Asia and the Pacific region.
Moreover, the Philippines has closed 80 percent of the gap in the economic participation and
opportunity gender index as Filipino women outnumber Filipino men in senior and leadership
roles and in professional and technical professions, thereby narrowing the participation gap
part of the index or the difference between men and women in labor force participation rates.
It has also closed the education attainment gender gap, given that literacy is universal with rates
above 98 percent for both sexes and more Filipino women than men are enrolled in secondary
education (71 percent women and 60 percent men) and tertiary education (57 percent women
and 43 percent men). It has also closed the health and survival gender gap, given that Filipino
women can expect to live in good health five years longer than Filipino men. However, the
political empowerment gender gap widened in recent years primarily because of decline in
female representation in the cabinet (which stood at 10 percent in 2019) and in the legislature
(which stood at 28 percent in 2019).
On SDG 8 (decent work and economic growth), economic growth pre-COVID was robust and
has been largely fueled by the services sector. Growth of labor productivity in 2017 was fast at
10.6 percent but in 2019 deteriorated to 2.7 percent. Jobs creation progressed and
unemployment continued to decline, from 5.4 percent in 2016 to 5.1 percent in 2019, although
the unemployment decline happened primarily across male workers. Female unemployment
rate remained unchanged at 5.2 percent in 2016 and 2019 whereas male unemployment rate
declined from 5.6 percent in 2016 to 5.1 percent in 2019. But the general progress in previous
years was dramatically eroded by the resulting joblessness during the lockdown periods, which
peaked at 17.7% unemployment rate in April 2020. Meanwhile, the employment situation for
the Filipino youth (aged 15-24 years) is not satisfactory even pre-COVID as they faced
constraints in the labor market like low educational attainment and lack of needed skills. Rather
than progressively decline, youth unemployment increased from a baseline of 11.5 percent in
2016 to 18.6 percent in 2019.
Outside SDG Watch monitoring by the PSA, other indicators of decent work can be examined
and in this regard, the International Labour Organization (ILO) reports poor condition. For
instance, the ILO (2017) reports that at least 38 percent of the employed are in the informal
sector, characterized by high levels of vulnerability and limited labor rights and social
protection coverage. The ILO (2020a) also reports that while minimum monthly wages in the
Philippines are highest among ASEAN countries, more than one tenth of wage and salary
workers are engaged in low-paid work in 2018. Moreover, more women (15.8 percent of
employed women) than men (10.2 percent of employed men) are engaged in low-paid work.
Average daily earnings of services workers are twice as much as those of the agriculture sector
workers (ILO 2020), reflecting a large divide between services and agriculture pay, which
raises concerns on the quality of employment in the rural areas.
34
For the SDG sub-indicator on labor rights, the ILO (2019) also notes three major categories or
areas where action is urgently needed to address freedom of association and right to collective
bargaining (under ILO Convention 98 and ILO Convention 98). These are:
(1) the need for legislative amendments on laws restricting workers’ rights to freely
organize;
(2) urgent measures to combat climate of impunity on violence against trade unionists and
ensure effective protection, including protection of civil liberties, and;
(3) promotion of a climate conducive to freedom of association, ensuring meaningful and
effective implementation of laws and access to remedies for freedom of assembly and
collective bargaining violations.
On SDG 9 (industry, innovation and infrastructure), indicators show that the country still
exhibits a relatively low level of industrialization given that manufacturing value added as a
proportion of GDP per capita was still low and even declined from 23.2 percent in 2016 to 22.8
percent in 2019 and manufacturing employment as a proportion of total employment
marginally improved from 8.3 percent in 2016 to 8.5 percent in 2019. With respect to
innovation as a contributor to increasing the country’s growth potential, based on the 2020
Global Innovation Index report, the Philippines’ ranking significantly improved to 50th out of
131 economies from a baseline of being ranked 74th out of 128 economies in 2016. According
to the report, the Philippines improved the most in market sophistication and scored higher in
investments, mostly due to protecting minority investors. Research and development
expenditure as a proportion of GDP, however, remained stagnant and stood at a mere 0.07
percent of GDP in 2019. Meanwhile, transport infrastructure demand expanded and ODA flows
to infrastructure improved. Passenger and freight volumes per transport infrastructure modes
increased and exceeded their 2016 baselines. In the maritime sector, passenger volume was
98.8 million people in 2018, container volume was 8.5 million metric tons in 2018, and cargo
volume was 293 million metric tons in 2017. In the aviation sector, passenger volume was 75.2
million people in 2017 and cargo volume was 962.6 metric tons in 2017. In the rail sector,
passenger volume was 378.8 million people in 2017. ODA flows to infrastructure increased
from USD430.60 million in 2016 to USD533.15 million in 2018. However, although not part
of the SDG Watch monitoring, it is well known that the stock and quality of Philippine
infrastructure are inadequate and that is why the administration has the Build Build Build
program as its flagship program.
On SDG 11 (sustainable cities and communities), many local governments already adopt and
implement local disaster risk reduction strategies in line with national disaster risk reduction
strategies. According to the UNDRR’s online Sendai Framework monitor, this is where the
Philippines has made good progress given that close to 75% of local governments have a DRR
strategy. The number of directly affected persons due to disasters per 100,000 population
declined from 8,853 in 2016 to 5,218 in 2018 and the number of missing persons attributed to
disaster per 100,000 population declined from 0.03 in 2016 to zero in 2018, but the number of
deaths per 100,000 population increased from 0.08 in 2016 to 0.24 in 2018. The pandemic and
recent disasters also exposed gaps in evacuation strategies. Displaced families struggled to
maintain physical distancing as evacuation centers are not enough given that some of them
were being used as quarantine facilities. For instance, of the 287 evacuation centers
programmed by the DPWH for all regions, only 130 were completed as of July 2020. 20
20
Office of Civil Defense October 16, 2020 update via facebook: https://m.facebook.com/notes/civil-defense-ph/building-disaster-
resilient-evacuation-centers/3032638303498645/.
35
Access to decent housing remains a problem for 2.45 million informal settlers, or 2.32 percent
of the population, according to the 2018 FIES. As of 2015 (latest available data), only 47
percent of highly urbanized and other major urban centers follow ambient air quality
guidelines.
● SDG 7 (affordable and clean energy): energy efficiency improved and renewable
energy is promising
● SDG 13 (climate action): onslaught of strong typhoons during the pandemic highlighted
climate injustice and the need for new commitments
● SDG 14 (life below water): commitment to marine area conservation remains firm
● SDG 15 (life on land): commitment to protecting forests and terrestrial and inland
freshwater ecosystems remains firm
● SDG 17 (partnerships): financial resource mobilization for the SDGs remains strong
Efforts toward affordable and clean energy can build on the Philippines’ recent gains on energy
efficiency improvement and the fact that investments are guided by a legal framework on
renewable energy. The recent onslaught of strong typhoons forces us to focus attention on
climate injustice which can be the strong impetus for extracting new commitments from
advanced countries. Greater financial resource mobilization and partnerships can accelerate the
achievements in all of these as well as in goals related to life below water and on land.
On SDG 7 (ensuring access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy), access
improved as the proportion of the population with access to electricity increased from 90.7
percent in 2016 to 95.3 percent in 2018 and energy efficiency improved as the use of energy
per real GDP declined from 6.7 tons of oil equivalent per million Philippine peso of real GDP
(TOE/M Php) in 2016 to 6.4 TOE/M Php in 2018. The SDG Watch has no entry for the goal
on increasing the share of renewable energy in the energy mix, but Department of Energy data
show that the share of renewable energy in total energy production declined from 24.21 percent
in 2016 to 23.38 percent in 2018. Nevertheless, the Philippines has a legal framework for
increasing renewable energy investments (Renewable Energy Act of 2008).
On SDG 13 (climate action), the country has already established an integrated plan which
increases its ability to adapt to the adverse impacts of climate change and has also identified
nationally determined contributions. Moreover, according to the UNDRR's online Sendai
Framework monitor, the Philippines has also made good progress with the sub-indicator on
developing a new national strategy for disaster risk reduction. This has recently been finalized
by the government as the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Framework and
Plan 2020-2030, which was approved by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and
Management Council last October 30. As in the SDG 11, resilience building outcomes shows
mixed results in terms of deaths, missing persons and affected persons after disasters.21
21
Note that the SDG Watch duplicates these sub-indicators from SDG 11 on sustainable cities and communities.
36
Recently, the onslaught of strong typhoons during the pandemic response brought to the fore
climate change issues once again. Typhoon Quinta (international name: Molave) made five
landfalls across the archipelago on October 23-27, resulting in 23 deaths and affecting 805,001
persons in seven regions; Super typhoon Rolly (international name: Gonio) struck on October
31-November 2, resulting in 25 deaths and affecting more than 2 million people in eight
regions; and Typhoon Ulysses (international name: Vamco) on November 9-12 brought severe
flooding to the capital and seven other regions, resulting in 67 deaths and affecting more than
a million people.22 More importantly, these disasters highlighted how the Philippines suffers
climate injustice—the poor in the Philippines which have done the least to cause climate
change problems are the most affected and bear most of the costs of climate-related disasters
like super-typhoons, while the rich in countries most responsible for climate change are the
least affected. The SDG conversations can highlight climate injustice as strong pressure on
countries that need to have new climate commitments and as justification for channeling greater
climate finance toward extremely vulnerable countries like the Philippines.
With respect to SDG 14 (life below water), the country’s commitment to marine conservation
remains firm as the marine areas being protected increased from 3.40 million hectares in 2016
to 3.86 million hectares in 2018.23 Moreover, the coverage of protected areas as a proportion
of marine areas, National Integrated Protected Areas System and locally managed marine
protected areas was 0.647% in 2016 and increased to 1.4% in 2019.
Outside the PSA’s SDG Watch, the UN SDG Global Database reports the following data for
the Philippines:
● average proportion of Marine Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) covered by protected
areas: 38% (2018)
● protected marine area (Exclusive Economic Zones): 21,084.22 sq. km. (2018)
With respect to SDG 15 (life on land), most sub-indicators committed for monitoring have
already been mapped. Forest area as a proportion of total land area was 23.4 percent in 2015.
Forest areas with tenure or management arrangements slightly declined from 2.6 million
hectares in 2017 to 2.5 million hectares in 2018. The proportion of important sites with good
ecosystem for terrestrial and freshwater biodiversity that are covered by protected areas was
0.5445 percent in 2019, and the proportion of important sites with excellent ecosystem for
terrestrial and freshwater biodiversity that are covered by protected areas was 0.2591 percent
in 2019. There are committed sub-indicators which do not yet have baselines in the
government’s SDG Watch being maintained by the PSA. Nevertheless, it is clear that strategies
and resources are needed in protecting the country’s forests and sites for terrestrial and inland
freshwater ecosystems.
ODA flows for conservation increased. ODA and public expenditure on conservation and
sustainable use of biodiversity and ecosystems was USD15.97 million in 2016 and USD32.72
million in 2018.
22
Figures from various NDRRMC Situation Reports.
23
The PSA’s SDG Watch denotes a baseline of 220 million hectares in 2016 and a figure of 3.08 million hectares in 2019, which
is conflicting and unlikely. The figures used in this CCA are taken instead from a database referred by the University of the
Philippines-Marine Science Institute. The latest available figure is for the year 2018 — a total of 3,861,255.50452 hectares. On
the other hand, the 2016 figure is only 3,395,474.27452 hectares, way lower than the 220 million hectares baseline from the PSA
and DENR-Environmental Management Bureau. (Philippine MPA Database. 2020. http://database.mpasupportnetwork.org/).
37
improvements in the levels of financial and technical assistance to the country due to the
increase in ODA. ODA as a proportion of total domestic budget increased from the 2016
baseline of 2.8 percent to the 2018 level of 5.8 percent. Foreign direct investments (FDIs) as a
proportion of total domestic budget, however, declined from the 2016 baseline of 18.4 percent
to the 2019 level of 11.5 percent.
As the implementation strategies required to achieve the SDGs are found not only in the
Philippine Development Plan 2017-2022 but also in sectoral plans, regional development
plans, and area development plans, the Philippine government also undertakes a process called
“localization of SDGs”. This is jointly being undertaken by the Department of Interior and
Local Government and the National Economic and Development Authority. These agencies
conducted series of regional and provincial workshops in 2018-2019 to increase the LGUs’
awareness of the SDGs and ensure that the latter support the SDGs in their respective
comprehensive development plans. Thus far, the localization has gained traction and continues
through opportunities opened from time to time by LGUs’ requests for technical assistance
from national agencies in updating their local plans.
Another recent development which needs to be discussed to set the general context of COVID-
19 impacts discussion in the next section is the creation of the Bangsamoro Autonomous
Region of Muslim Mindanao. The creation of an autonomous region in Muslim Mindanao is
provided in the 1987 Constitution, as envisioned by the Moro delegates to the 1986
Constitutional Commission. Initially, the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM)
was created in 1990 after the 1989 enactment of Republic Act No. 6734 (the Organic Act for
the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao) and the first regional election on 17 February
1990. Even with the ARMM in place, the armed groups Moro National Liberation Front
(MNLF) and Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) were pushing for separation of certain
parts of Mindanao from the Republic of the Philippines. In 1996, the government and the
MNLF entered into a peace agreement and the MNLF leaders subsequently became ARMM
leaders after winning the next regional election. The MILF, however, continued fighting the
government as it perceived that the ARMM fell short of delivering peace in the region. Peace
overtures continued and in 2012 and 2014, peace agreements between the MILF and the
government were signed and these paved the way for the creation of a new political entity that
replaced the ARMM as well as a transition process.
Eventually, the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL), Republic Act No. 11054 or “An Act
Providing for the Organic Law for the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao
(BARMM), Repealing for the Purpose Republic Act 6734 as Amended by RA 9054”, was
enacted on 27 July 2018. The BOL ensures fundamental equality before the law and provides
gender-responsive policies. The BOL was ratified through a two-part plebiscite—on 21
January 2019 for the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), Cotabato City, and
Isabela City, and on 06 February 2019 for Lanao del Norte (except Iligan City), North Cotabato,
and other local government units that petitioned to be included. The plebiscite resulted in a
BARMM geographic area that is an expansion of the previous ARMM geographic area, and is
composed of the following: the former ARMM component local government units, namely,
the provinces of Basilan, Lanao del Sur, Maguindanao, Sulu, and Tawi-Tawi, and the cities of
Marawi and Lamitan; Cotabato City and 63 barangays in the municipalities of Aleosan,
38
Carmen, Kabacan, Midsayap, Pigkawayan, and Pikit in the province of North Cotabato.
With the inclusion of new areas, the autonomous region has a population of 4,273,149 (based
on the 2015 national census) and a total land area of 12,711.79 square kilometers.
The Bangsamoro economy is small relative to other regions as gross regional domestic product
(GRDP) contributed only 1.3 percent to the national economic output consistently from 2017
to 2019. Despite this, regional economic output of BARMM grew at an accelerated rate of 7.7
percent in 2018 and 5.9 percent in 2019. Among the major economic sectors, the services sector
has dominated the regional economy of BARMM in 2019, with the sector having the largest
share of GRDP at 40.4 percent and a relative high growth rate at 7.7 percent. Meanwhile, the
agriculture, forestry and fishing, and industry sectors contributed 34.5 and 25.1 percent share,
respectively, during the same period.
The region is also the country’s poorest, with poverty incidence at 61.3 percent in 2018. The
three poorest provinces in the country are in BARMM: Sulu with 81.8 percent poverty
incidence in 2018, Basilan with 72.8 percent poverty incidence, and Lanao del Sur with 71.2
percent poverty incidence. Armed conflicts worsened the poverty situation. Sulu and Basilan
are considered bases of terrorist activities by the Abu Sayaff Group and its allies, and Lanao
del Sur suffered from La Nina in 2016 and its city, Marawi, was attacked by terrorists in 2017,
resulting in a five-month battle which left the city center in ruins. For the Mindanao island
group in general, the poverty profile is almost similar to that of the BARMM. Mindanao
remains the poorest island group among the country’s three major island groups (namely,
Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao). Based on the 2018 survey, the poverty incidence in Mindanao
was 31.5 percent, whereas for Luzon it was 9.3 percent and for Visayas it was 20.1 percent.
The poverty incidence is also particularly low in provinces in other Mindanao regions which
are experiencing conflicts, namely, Regions IX, X, XI, XII and Caraga (see Table 8). As
conflicts in these areas persist, the areas are not only less attractive to economic investments,
but are also prone to persistent internal population displacement, as can be gleaned in the
subsequent discussion of peace in this report.
39
Table 8. Poverty incidence among population (in %) in Mindanao regions and provinces,
2018
Hunger and malnutrition are also prevalent. The 2015 Nutrition Survey by the National
Nutrition Council revealed that the Bangsamoro region has 45.2 percent stunting among
children less than five years old (the national average is 33.4 percent) and 8.2 percent wasting
among children less than five years old (the national average is 7.1 percent).
With respect to education, for school year 2018-2019, enrolled female students outnumber
male students (see Figure 4). Cohort survival rates for elementary and secondary levels had
been increasing but continues to be below the national average for the elementary level.
Elementary cohort survival rate in the region for school year 2018-2019 was 77.87 percent,
whereas the national average was 93.35 percent. The quality of basic education is a problem as
the region consistently had low National Achievement Test (NAT) results and below
satisfactory overall mean percentage score, especially at the secondary level. School
infrastructure is also a problem as the classroom-to-student ratios (CSR) suggest overcrowding.
The national CSR standard is 1:45 but according to computations based on school year 2015-
2016 data, the CSR in Basilan was 1:53 and in Maguindanao, it was 1:52.
40
Figure 4. Public schools enrollment with gender distribution, School Year 2018-2019
The Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) provides for the creation of an interim government called
the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA), which is composed of appointees by the
President and vested with executive and legislative powers. The BTA shall serve from 2019 to
June 2022, after which a new set of Bangsamoro Government officials shall have been elected.
For fiscal year (FY) 2019, the BTA operated on the budget transferred from ARMM to
BARMM. Going forward, the BOL authorizes the following funding provisions:
● For the next five years, the National Government shall provide for additional funds to
subsidize expenditures for development projects and infrastructure. The amount and
manner of release shall be agreed upon by the Intergovernmental Relations Body.
(Article XII, Section 23 of the BOL)
● Special Development Fund amounting to Php50 billion (at Php5 billion per year for a
period of 10 years) for the rebuilding, rehabilitation and development of its conflict-
affected communities (Article XIV, Section 2)
● Compensation of the members of the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (Article XVI,
Section 2)
● Land and permanent buildings or structures located outside the ARMM, owned,
controlled, administered, or in the possession of the ARG, shall be purchased by the
National Government at a price to be determined through the intergovernmental
relations mechanism within 1 year from the ratification of this Organic Law (Article
XVI, Section 3.d)
● Benefits and entitlements of the affected employees of the Autonomous Regional
Government in Muslim Mindanao during the transition period (Article XVI, Section
10)
● The National Government (NG) shall provide for the disposition of personnel and assets
of the NG or NG-owned or –controlled corporations whose mandate and functions are
transferred to or now vested in the Bangsamoro Government by virtue of this Organic
Law (Article XVI, Section 11)
41
Last year, the Bangsamoro government approved a Php65-billion budget for fiscal year 2020.
Education, health, and social services were given the highest allocation. Seven of the 19
ministries and offices got allocations of over a billion pesos each: the Ministry of Basic, Higher
and Technical Education received the highest allocation at Php19.056 billion; followed by the
Office of the Chief Minister with Php7.922 billion; the Ministry of Public Works with
Php4.089 billion; the Ministry of Health with Php3.069 billion; the Bangsamoro Transition
Authority with Php2.591 billion; the Ministry of Social Services and Development with
Php2.033 billion; and the Interior and Local Government with Php1.354 billion.
The first medium-term economic plan for the region, the Bangsamoro Development Plan 2020-
2022, has just been crafted. The strategies contained therein shall underpin the sectoral
programs and projects in the succeeding Bangsamoro budgets. To summarize, the following
are the sector-specific strategies in the plan:
A crucial part of the transition in the BARMM is the “normalization process”, which is a
process for ensuring human security in the Bangsamoro and enabling conflict-affected
communities to achieve their desired quality of life and pursue sustainable development and
peaceful political participation. It is framed by the “Annex on Normalization” which is an
annex to the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro signed in 2014 between the
Government of the Philippines and the MILF. Normalization includes the decommissioning of
40,000 MILF combatants, the socio-economic transformation of former MILF camps into
sustainable and peaceful communities, and the pursuit of transitional justice and reconciliation.
The decommissioning activity is currently ongoing and is targeted to be completed during the
transition period. A more detailed discussion can be found in the peace-related analysis in
Section 3.3 of this CCA.
42
3. COVID-19 Impacts and Trajectories of Sustainable Development Outcomes
To shape the UN’s strategies that are appropriate under the Partnership Framework for
Sustainable Development (PFSD) 2019-2023, this CCA provides analysis of how the COVID-
19 pandemic is impacting the three pillars of the PFSD, namely, the people, prosperity and
planet, and peace pillars. This analysis is important so that the direction and level of support
and cooperation are maintained along the following desired overall outcomes articulated in the
PFSD. These will also be the desired outcomes in the forthcoming UN Socioeconomic and
Peacebuilding Framework for COVID-19 Recovery in the Philippines, which will retain the
structure of the three pillars.
People pillar - The most marginalized, vulnerable, and at risk people and groups benefit
from more inclusive and quality services and live in more supportive environments
where their nutrition, food security, and health are ensured and protected.
Prosperity and planet pillar - Urbanization, economic growth, and climate change actions
are converging for a resilient, equitable, and sustainable development path for
communities.
Peace pillar - National and local governments and key stakeholders recognize and share
a common understanding of the diverse cultural history, identity and inequalities
of areas affected by conflict, enabling the establishment of more inclusive and
responsive governance systems, and accelerating sustainable and equitable
development, for just and lasting peace in conflict-affected areas of Mindanao.
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted prevailing inequalities and initial assessments show that
the pandemic and measures implemented to curb it disproportionately inflict heavier impacts
on the most vulnerable, the left behind groups. These have profound implications mainly in the
form of regression on human development and narrowing of capability to access future
socioeconomic opportunities.
Families’ income losses due to the rolling lockdowns and lower economic activities resulted in
widespread hunger and food insecurity, which exacerbated pre-existing problems on food
security and nutrition in the country. These will have immediate health impacts as well as long-
term consequences for the health status of the population. Long-term effects would include
undesirable health outcomes for children, at a time when the country is confronted with the
huge problem of stunting and malnutrition among children.
The COVID-19 disease itself is already impacting the health outcomes for the population as
casualties mount and the disease leave those who were affected by it with side effects such as
lung damage, recurring fatigue, and motor skills impairment, the long-term consequences of
which are still being researched. Non-COVID health services delivery is also being affected as
COVID-19 disrupts existing vaccination campaigns, treatment of non-COVID patients, and
delivery of non-COVID supplies.
43
It is worrisome that enrolment rate declined but what is more worrisome is the quality of
education that will arise out of the sub-optimal mode of learning that the Philippine education
system has to adopt. Filipino education services delivery shifted from physical classroom
setting to a blended mode of digital classrooms, education lectures via TV and radio broadcast,
and distribution of paper learning modules in order to prevent learners and teachers from
getting infected with the virus.
The food insecurity, health effects, and sub-optimal education will have debilitating impacts
on the future human development potential of Filipinos and this consideration must figure in
the total response to the pandemic.
The pandemic has disproportionate impacts on those who are left behind, and this implies the
need for greater scrutiny of existing inequalities and the need to make visible the current status
and vulnerabilities of the left behind groups in all stages of the COVID response. The social
welfare programs delivery to vulnerable groups has highlighted issues in the area of governance
and in order to make future responses effective, governance improvements must set in place.
Before COVID, the Philippine human development index (HDI), as shown in the 2019
Human Development Report, exhibited a generally upward trajectory in terms of
pursuing the three basic dimensions of human development—a long and healthy life,
access to knowledge, and a decent standard of living. The pandemic is putting this positive
trajectory at risk. Table 9 below shows that life expectancy at birth, an indicator of long and
healthy life in the HDI, increased significantly pre-COVID. Access to learning and knowledge
by expected years of schooling for children of school-entry age, however, shows a slight
deterioration since 2016. Knowledge level, as measured by mean years of schooling, or the
average number of years of schooling received in a lifetime by people aged 25 years and older,
exhibited an increasing trend. Standard of living as measured by Gross National Income (GNI)
per capita expressed in constant 2011 international dollars converted using purchasing power
parity (PPP) conversion rates, also significantly increased.
In sum, the Philippines’ HDI value for 2018 is 0.712 and the country was ranked 106th out of
189 countries and territories. This puts the country in the high human development category.
However, this is pre-COVID pandemic. The pandemic is putting this positive trajectory at risk
as economic growth slows down and family incomes decline, with adverse implications on
families’ spending on food, health, and education.
44
Table 9. Trajectory of human development indicators pre-COVID
Taking off from the official 2018 data on HDI and its components and given the estimated
and assumed impacts of COVID-19 on the HDI components, the 2020 COVID-adjusted
HDI for the Philippines is simulated. This is done in Table 10. In the simulation, the
following are assumed:
a. The health effects set back life expectancy at birth to its 2019 level, similar with the
assumption by the UN Human Development Report Office (HDRO) in its 2020
simulation of the global HDI.24
b. The expected years of schooling for 2019 is estimated based on Labor Force Survey
data. Then the expected years of schooling for 2020 is projected using the Department
of Education (DepEd)’s estimate of decline in enrolment as of October 8, 2020 and
the extrapolation of 2020 population of learners is estimated based on the
demographic projections by age group.
c. The mean years of schooling is assumed to miss two years of annual growth; hence, it
will be back to its 2018 level. This is because we assume that school dropout rates and
college dropout rates will be high given the high opportunity cost of education.
Historically, learners above elementary level have high dropout rates.
d. The GNI per capita in 2011 PPP $ is replaced by GNI per capita in 2017 PPP $
recalculation by the World Bank (based on WB rebasing done in May 2020). Then the
mid-point of the NEDA-DBCC projected real GNI growth for low and high growth
scenarios is taken and the PSA population projection for 2020 is applied.
24
The UN HDRO’s results of the global HDI simulation are in UNDP (2020). COVID-19 and Human Development: Assessing the
Crisis, Envisioning the Recovery. 2020 Human Development Perspectives. United Nations, New York.
45
Table 10. Simulating the 2020 Human Development Index given COVID-19
2020
2018 Assumptions, data inputs
(projected)
set back to 2019 level, UN World
Life expectancy at birth 71.1 71.16
Population Prospects
using 2019 projection of
expected years of schooling
(based on LFS data), then using
Expected years of schooling 12.7 12.5783 2020 projected population of
learners and DepEd estimate of
decline in enrolment as of
October 8
assuming 2 years of annual
growth in mean years of
Mean years of schooling 9.4 9.40
schooling are missed, i.e., back
to 2018 level
conversion inputs used: GNI per
GNI per capita capita in 2017 PPP $ of WB,
(in 2011 PPP $ for the 2018 HDI, 9,540 9,112.63 NEDA-DBCC projected real GNI
in 2017 PPP $ for the 2020 HDI) growth, and PSA population
projection
Philippines’ Human
0.712 0.708
Development Index
Source: UN Human Development Report 2019 for the 2018 figures. Authors’ simulations for the 2020 figures.
The resulting simulation of COVID-adjusted HDI in 2020 shows a steep decline of the
Philippine HDI to 0.708. This implies that human development in the Philippines is simulated
to set back by about three years or could return to its pre-2017 level. (Note that the 2016 HDI
is 0.704 and the 2017 HDI is 0.709.) This is less than the global HDI setback estimated by the
UN HDRO, which simulated that global HDI will regress by six years, an unprecedented
decline since the concept of HDI was introduced in 1990 (UNDP 2020).
The expected regression in Philippine HDI represents the devastating impacts of COVID-19
on the ground. All policy levers by the government must be employed and greater contribution
by development partners is needed to prevent further deterioration in 2021.
The mobility restrictions, disruption in economic activities, and income losses gave rise
to serious pressures on food insecurity and reduced nutrition among households. In a
survey by the Innovations for Poverty Action conducted between 18 June to 01 July 2020 and
covering a random nationwide sample of 1,389 respondents,25 the following findings reveal the
misery suffered by Filipino households in terms of food insecurity:
25
The respondents came from all regions. However, the sampling method involves random digit dialing of phone numbers in the
cellular service network and thus the sampling frame is not nationally representative.
46
● “26 percent of respondents say they have had to limit portion sizes at meal times more
than once in the past week, more than 20 percent have had to reduce the number of
meals eaten in a day, and more than 35 percent have reduced the kinds of food eaten in
a day more than once in the past week;
● Over 70 percent of respondents say they have had difficulty buying the amount of food
they usually buy because household income has dropped
● 89 percent of households have received support from the government in response to
COVID-19. Of those that are receiving support, 97 percent are receiving food and 45
percent are receiving cash; 45 percent of households report receiving cash payments
from the government that they do not usually receive;
● 70 percent of respondents say they have had to deplete savings to pay for food since
February 2020;
● Men and women are similarly likely to say they have had to deplete savings to pay for
food since February 2020;
● Respondents with school-age children are more likely to say they borrowed money they
were not certain they could pay back on time, skipped making a required payment on a
loan, or bought fewer inputs than planned to pay for food since February 2020;
● Poorer respondents are more likely to say they borrowed money they were not certain
they could pay back on time to pay for food since February 2020;
● Almost 60 percent of respondents say they have had difficulty going to food markets
due to government mobility restrictions, and more than 50 percent due to food markets
being closed;
● Of respondents that receive regular government transfers (n=128), 38 percent have
experienced difficulties in accessing payments.” (Innovations for Poverty Action, 2020,
pp. 28, 35-37, 42, 49, 54).
This has grave consequences for the nutritional status of family members, especially
children. This can reverse trends in or delay the improvements of nutritional status of children
0-5 years old that is already a serious policy concern even before the COVID-19 pandemic.
The declining trends in stunting, being underweight, wasting, and being overweight among
children 0-5 years old (see Figure 5) are now put at great risk by the pandemic.
47
Figure 5. Trends in nutritional status of children 0-5 years old
Legend:
Stunting: height for age < –2 SD of the WHO Child Growth Standards median
Underweight: weight for age < –2 standard deviations (SD) of the WHO Child Growth Standards median
Wasting: weight for height < –2 SD of the WHO Child Growth Standards median
Overweight for height: weight for height > +2 SD of the WHO Child Growth Standards median
Source: National Nutrition Survey (various years), Department of Science and Technology-Food and Nutrition
Research Institute (DOST-FNRI)
The pandemic and community quarantines also resulted in involuntary hunger. The
Social Weather Stations (SWS) found in a national mobile survey conducted on September 17-
20, 2020 that a record-high 30.7 percent or an estimated 7.6 million families experienced
involuntary hunger (i.e., hunger due to lack of food to eat) at least once in the past three months.
This is the highest hunger rate in SWS surveys since the 23.8 percent rate recorded in March
2012. The 30.7 percent hunger rate is further broken down into 22 percent or an estimated 5.5
million families who experienced moderate hunger (only once or a few times in the last three
months) and 8.7 percent or an estimated 2.2 million families who experienced severe hunger
(often or always in the last three months). Overall hunger was highest in areas far from the
capital—it was 40.7 percent in Visayas and 24.2 percent in Mindanao. It was 16.3 percent in
the National Capital Region and 17.8% in the rest of Luzon.
Although it is uncommon for government to use SWS surveys as official reference because
these involve a lot of “noise” or fluctuation in the data, the SWS finding that Filipinos are
experiencing involuntary hunger is confirmed by official nutrition surveys. In particular, the
Department of Science and Technology-Food and Nutrition Research Institute (DOST-
FNRI)’s nutrition surveys found that households that were severely food insecure were 21.9
percent in 2015 and 12.8 percent in 2018, and that households that were moderately food
insecure were 31.9 percent in 2015 and 28.8 percent in 2018 (see Figure 6). In estimating these
food insecurity indicators, the DOST-FNRI used a household food insecurity access scale that
assesses the households’ experience of nine situations of hunger and food insecurity in the past
month, as described in the conceptual framework in Figure 7.
48
Figure 6. Percentage of households by food security status, 2015 vs. 2018
From a sectoral perspective, aggregate food security is also at risk given that the
pandemic aggravated existing challenges in the Philippines’ agri-food system. According
to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO, 2020), restriction measures related to the
pandemic have aggravated existing short-term and long-term challenges in the Philippines’
agri-food system. Even before the pandemic, pressures on food supply continue to mount given
the agri-food sector’s short-term problems, such as African swine fever, avian influenza and
fall armyworm, and typhoons, and long term concerns, such as high costs of logistics and
storage, a disconnected value chain, and vulnerability of agriculture to environmental hazards.
The mobility restrictions, quarantine protocols, and establishment closures calibrated based on
community quarantine status are negatively affecting household incomes and causing food
accessibility issues. According to the April-May 2020 survey of the National Economic and
49
Development Authority (IATF-Technical Working Group for Anticipatory and Forward
Planning, 2020), disruptions in trading and transportation resulted in agriculture sector losses
of Php94.3 million (about USD1.9 million) from unsold produce, with the regions of
CALABARZON and Central Luzon accounting for 27.9 percent and 26.3 percent of the losses,
respectively. The Department of Agriculture, nevertheless, continues to give assurances on the
food security status of the country.
Containing the spread of the virus and enabling quick economic recovery depends not
only on lockdowns and the cooperation of the public but also on the capacity of the health
system to respond to the pandemic. The Philippines has to improve significantly in this
aspect. Systemic problems in the Philippine health system exist even before the pandemic.
Dayrit et al. (2018) cites some of these problems. Data showed that physical infrastructure was
limited and inequitably distributed—almost two thirds of the 101,688 hospital beds (distributed
in 1,224 hospitals across the country) were in Luzon, and there were 23 hospital beds for every
10,000 people in the NCR while the rest of Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao have only 8.2, 7.8,
and 8,3 beds per 10,000 people, respectively. Moreover, in terms of human resources, the
density of nurses per 10,000 population was highest in NCR at 12.6 and lowest in ARMM (note
that there was no BARMM yet in 2018) at 4.2. The study also cites health expenditure issues.
The three major flows of public health financing (DOH funds, local government funds, and
Philippine Health Corporation or PhilHealth funds) have overlapping coverage. PhilHealth is
not yet a strategic purchaser of services and accounts for a small share of total health
expenditure while out-of-pocket spending by Filipinos continues to be the dominant source of
financing for health care. (Recently, this systemic weakness surfaced as PhilHealth officials
figured in corruption allegations about a services purchasing scheme called interim
reimbursement mechanism that justifies the extension of cash advances to hospitals.26) The
progress of local governments toward the attainment of national health objectives is also highly
uneven under an environment of devolved health financing and services delivery. In addition,
the private sector has not yet been optimally engaged in delivering health care in the universal
health care context, which requires strong regulatory capacity and leveraging of financing
incentives.
Moreover, in a preparedness dashboard for South-East Asian countries for COVID-19, the
United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) shows
that the Philippines is in the median with respect to availability of physicians but fares low in
terms of hospital beds availability and number of nurses and midwives. Averaging between
2010 to 2018, physicians per 10,000 people are 12.8, hospital beds per 10,000 people are 10,
which makes the country among the three lowest in this indicator, and nurses and midwives
per 10,000 people are 2, which lands the country at the bottom in this indicator (UNESCAP,
2020). The government, nevertheless, has upgraded its COVID response by increasing its
testing capacity, which now involves 147 licensed RT-PCR laboratories and 44 GeneXpert
laboratories across the archipelago and have so far tested 5.7 million individuals, increasing
the ICU bed capacity and availability of mechanical ventilators in hospitals, constructing
isolation and quarantine facilities in major cities and local government units, and continuous
hiring of health workers (for the 16,808 approved slots for emergency hiring in 374 health
facilities nationwide) (DOH 2020).
26
BusinessWorld. 2020. Senate ends PhilHealth corruption probe. 19 August 2020. https://www.bworldonline.com/senate-ends-
philhealth-corruption-probe/.
50
With respect to the health system strategy to fight the pandemic, the weaknesses seem to
be in isolating cases at symptom onset and contact tracing and the government’s delays
in these could mean longer community quarantines and delayed economic recovery. The
Philippines is said to have the longest lockdown so far and yet, as the DOH data (Figure 1 in
the previous section) show, there is slow progress in flattening the curve. On 17 August 2020,
the Philippine Red Cross (PRC) reported huge backlogs by the DOH (more than 5,000 cases)
in informing individuals about their positive COVID results; given that the delay in isolation
potentially resulted in higher virus transmission, protocols were eventually agreed to allow the
PRC itself to inform people of their test results. Delays were further aggravated when PRC had
to stop COVID testing on October 14 due to a Php1 billion backlog in payments by PhilHealth,
another symptom of systemic weaknesses in the health system.27
Moreover, reports from the government designated contact tracing czar Mayor Benjamin
Magalong (of Baguio City, Cordillera Administrative Region) claim that contact tracing ratio
in the Philippines is still weak at only 1:7. 28 This means that for every COVID case, local
government units can track only 7 close contacts. The ideal ratio, according to Mayor
Magalong, is 1:37. One shortcoming is the weak capacity of the contract tracers to do their job.
Senator Sonny Angara, the sponsor of the Department of the Interior and Local Government
(DILG)’s proposed budget for 2021 said that there are 257,000 contact tracers in the country
as of 20 November 2020, but only 55 percent of them have capacity to do contact- tracing.
Meanwhile, the hiring of health workers also suffered delays. It is only recently that the backlog
in hiring narrowed. Out of the 16,808 approved slots for emergency hiring of health workers,
only 11,672 were hired as of 5 December 2020 (DOH, 2020). Surely, the Philippines must
strategically focus on contact tracing, early case isolation, and ensuring the adequacy of the
health sector workforce.
Non-COVID health service delivery is already being affected such as the government’s
anti-polio vaccination campaign, which is currently encountering delays due to the
pandemic. It was announced by a DOH official in a media briefing in August that the
coronavirus pandemic is complicating the government’s polio immunization campaign for
children under five years old. The third round of the anti-polio vaccination drive began in July.
The DOH reported that the vaccination drive in the NCR as well as CALABARZON is not
performing very well because these areas being epicenters of COVID-19 transmission is
hindering the health workers’ performance and families’ acceptance of routine immunization
services. There were instances when vaccinators needed to undergo mandatory quarantine after
being exposed to the novel coronavirus, thus delaying the effort.
The Philippines was already declared polio-free by the World Health Organization
(WHO) nineteen years ago, but polio re-emerged in September 2019 at a time when there
was low public confidence level in vaccination. In 2019, the DOH acknowledged this low
confidence level given the evidence provided by the results of the vaccine confidence study
that compared 2015 confidence levels against 2018 levels. The Vaccine Confidence Project by
the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (Larson et al., 2018) found the following
Philippine respondents’ views on vaccines: the view that vaccines are important decreased
from 93% to 32%; the view that vaccines are safe and effective declined from 82% to 21%;
27
BusinessMirror. 2020. Red Cross stops Covid testing funded by PhilHealth. 15 October 2020.
https://businessmirror.com.ph/2020/10/15/red-cross-stops-covid-testing-funded-by-philhealth/.
28
CNN Philippines. 2020. Magalong admits contact tracing in PH still ‘weak’, 20 November 2020.
https://www.cnnphilippines.com/news/2020/11/20/weak-coronavirus-contact-tracing-PH---.html
51
and overall vaccine confidence dropped from 93 to 32%.
Other non-COVID health service delivery disruptions that the government must watch
out for include disruptions in HIV, hepatitis and sexually transmitted infection (STI)
services and restricted access to reproductive and maternal health services. The World
Health Organization (WHO) reported in July 2020 that the Philippines is among 36 countries
which had disruption in the provision of services related to HIV, hepatitis and STI since April
2020. The Philippines is also among countries which raised potential stock-outs of supplies for
Hepatitis B and C. The disruptions can adversely impact the prevention of new infections and
the treatment of currently affected individuals. For the countries monitored, the cited causes of
disruptions include:
It is also feared that there could be a rise in maternal deaths and unintended pregnancies in the
Philippines by end-2020 because the pandemic has disrupted reproductive, maternal, and
neonatal health services. Preliminary results of a study by the University of the Philippines
Population Institute (UPPI) and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) reveal that the
maternal mortality cases (deaths due to complications from pregnancy or childbirth) in 2020
can increase to up to 670 additional deaths (26% increase from 2019 level). The study also
shows that Filipino women of reproductive age (15-49 years of age) who do not use any
contraception, though they do not want to become pregnant, can increase in 2020 by 2.07
million (67% increase from 2019 level). Moreover, the study finds 18,000 more Filipino
teenage girls getting pregnant in 2020 compared to 2019. The study also posits that intimate
partner violence is expected to increase because with the lockdowns, women and girls are more
likely to be stuck with their abusers at home. The study estimates a possible 20 percent increase
in intimate partner violence, physical or sexual, from 2019 to 2020 (UNFPA 2020).
The trajectory on the use of contraception already shows a decline in access, as shown by the
last National Demographic and Health Survey. Contraceptive use for all categories of women
fell between 2013 and 2017 (see Table 11) and the pandemic is likely aggravating this situation
during lockdowns. Policymakers and health program implementers must therefore respond to
the challenge of increasing access to reproductive health services with greater resolve.
52
Table 11. Current use of any method of contraception, 1993-2017
Even pre-COVID pandemic, inequality has persisted in the delivery of health services in
the Philippines. In a 2017 study commissioned by the DOH, urban-rural health inequities are
found (Epimetrics, 2017). Using data from the 2013 National Demographic and Health Survey,
the study finds that overall urban rates masks inequalities in health outcomes between slums
and non-slums. Examining detailed data reveals that across the first five years of life, the
mortality gap between slums and non-slums is widening and although aggregate child mortality
rates are lower in urban areas than in rural areas, rates in urban slums are like those in rural
areas. In general, the study finds that health outcomes of Filipinos living in urban slums as
worse than those living in non-slums, and sometimes worse than those living in rural areas.
Since many of the risks that define the living conditions of slum households exist outside the
health sector, such as governance, physical environment, social and economic security,
interventions to close the health inequities should revolve not only around improving access to
health services but also around non-health interventions.
The ongoing COVID-19 outbreak has highlighted the inequality dimensions of access to
drinking water and sanitation services and has also drawn attention to proper hygiene
and behavior. Separate SDG monitoring on WASH by the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring
Programme highlighted the vulnerability of those who do not have access to safe water and
handwashing facilities (see Figure 8). Access to safe drinking water, access to improved
sanitation services, and keeping a safe and clean environment need to be included in the
response agenda as these are important determinants of health outcomes and play a key role in
infection prevention and control of COVID-19 and other infectious diseases. In addition, the
COVID-19 outbreak highlighted the importance of proper hygiene and behavior when one is
sick. Concerns over health for self and families drew heightened attention and support from
various sectors, development partners and the business community to establish water and
sanitation facilities in strategic areas. This level of motivation and investment in systems will
need to be sustained once the outbreak is brought under control.
53
Figure 8. Significant inequities in access to water supply and sanitation
Source: WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP) for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
(washdata.org)
54
3.1.4. Education and training services delivery
Although the SDG trajectory for education suggests that significant improvements were
happening before the pandemic, the drastic change in education service delivery modes
might worsen inequalities unless critical investments in ICT infrastructure are made.
Looking at the SDG indicators on education and comparing the 2016 baseline rates and 2018
rates, one can see that the school completion rates improved from 93.1 percent to 97.2 percent
for primary schools and from 80.9 percent to 88.4 for secondary schools, and dropout or school
leavers rate improved from 1.5 percent to 0.5 percent for primary schools and from 6.2 percent
to 3.4 percent for secondary schools. This trajectory, however, is constrained by technology
and fiscal space. The Department of Education (DepEd) is now switching to “blended” learning
modes, which include using modular home-based approach, online distance learning, and using
TV- or radio-based instruction. According to the DepEd itself, it might miss almost 50 percent
of the poorest households with TV-based instruction, and around 27 percent of the poorest
households with online distance learning. This seems to suggest that the modular home-based
approach is still the most inclusive out of all the delivery modalities, but it comes with greater
risks and would require much time and effort, especially for far-flung areas.
Internet, TV, and radio coverage is also challenging in some parts of the country. For example,
SDG monitoring on access to internet reveals that in 2018, only 28.6 percent of primary schools
have access, only 40.8 percent of junior high schools have access, and only 70.5 percent of
senior high schools have access. Moreover, according to the 2019 National ICT Household
Survey: less than half (47.1%) of Filipino households have communal radios; around 82.7% of
households have television at home; about 17.7% of households have their own internet access
at home; only 8.2% of households households have their own fixed telephone line; there are
24.0% of households have communal cellphones; and about 23.8% of households have
communal computers.
Broadband connectivity, ICT equipment, quality curricula and digital skills for learners and
instructors are all required to enhance the delivery of education and training, and to provide
avenues for increased resilience in future crises.
Left behind groups stand to suffer a greater impact of the pandemic on their human
development potential. That some groups are left behind despite progress in overall
poverty reduction in recent years is evidenced by indicators pointing to high inequality
in the Philippines. The Gini coefficient of the Philippines declined in 2018 but not by much.
The Gini coefficient was 44.9 in 2015 and declined to 42.7 in 2018. Although the Philippines’
human development index (HDI) for 2018 is 0.712 and places the country in the high HDI
group, when the value is discounted for inequality, the HDI falls to 0.582, which amounts to a
55
loss of 18.2 percent. The average loss due to inequality for East Asia and the Pacific is 16.6
percent.
Even before COVID, inequality across Philippine regions was glaring and can be seen in
marked disparities in regional economic output per capita and poverty incidence. Table
12 below shows the differences in Gross Regional Domestic Product (GRDP) per capita and
poverty incidence across regions based on latest data. Note that poverty incidence sharply
declined in the NCR but increased in BARMM. Although regional growth has been less even
in recent years, there are still marked disparities in the levels of GRDP per capita between the
poor and rich regions, as Table 13 shows. For instance, comparing 2019 data between the NCR
as the richest region and the BARMM as the poorest region shows that NCR per capita output
on the average was 8.46 times that of BARMM.
Table 12. Gross Regional Domestic Product (in constant 2018 prices) and Poverty Incidence
Note: The recently released 2019 GRDP figures in constant prices are rebased data wherein the base year was
shifted from year 2000 to year 2018. The PSA backtracking of rebased data has been done for 2017-2019
so far.
56
Table 13. GRDP per capita in other regions as a factor of NCR GRDP per capita
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority for the raw data used in the computations.
Aside from the poor, other groups which are already left behind before the pandemic
stand to suffer greater impact on their human development potential. These groups include
the informal settlers who consist 2.32 percent of the population or about 2.45 million people
(see Table 14). These also include the 12.73 million informal sector workers who are
concentrated in the Central Luzon and CALABARZON regions (see Table 15). These also
include the persons with disabilities (PWD) who belong to 1.44 million households (see Table
16). It is worth emphasizing that one of the complaints during the early days of community
quarantine in the Philippines is the absence of PWD-friendly announcements and news, which
the government has started addressing. The plight of the indigenous peoples (IPs), estimated at
8.8 million people under the 2010 census (consisting of 7.9 million non-Muslim IPs and 900
thousand Muslim IPs), is also likely to get worse should the pandemic reach their communities
given their very low levels of access to safe water and sanitation (see Annex B for the list of
IPs in the Philippines and their access to water and sanitation). To avoid a disproportionate
impact of the pandemic on those who are left behind, their current status and
vulnerabilities must be made visible in all stages of COVID-related policy and program
intervention—from design to budgeting and eventual implementation.
57
Table 14. Number and percentage of households and individuals who are informal settlers,
2018
Households Population
Region
Number Percent Number Percent
PHILIPPINES 531,596 2.15 2,451,968 2.32
National Capital Region (NCR) 138,542 4.17 604,522 4.49
Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR) 4,761 1.13 19,508 1.10
Region I (Ilocos Region) 9,890 0.82 43,176 0.83
Region II (Cagayan Valley) 6,105 0.72 29,518 0.82
Region III (Central Luzon) 31,457 1.13 154,705 1.30
Region IV-A (CALABARZON) 51,902 1.38 227,372 1.47
Region IV-B (MIMAROPA) 8,731 1.18 39,042 1.26
Region V (Bicol Region) 20,256 1.58 101,055 1.68
Region VI (Western Visayas) 36,423 1.99 165,962 2.14
Region VII (Central Visayas) 48,544 2.64 216,015 2.79
Region VIII (Eastern Visayas) 21,756 2.06 94,549 2.05
Region IX (Zamboanga Peninsula) 25,372 3.03 121,097 3.25
Region X (Northern Mindanao) 26,615 2.38 125,446 2.56
Region XI (Davao Region) 18,015 1.40 76,270 1.49
Region XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) 24,970 2.21 112,729 2.36
Region XIII (Caraga) 15,471 2.50 72,163 2.68
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao
(ARMM) 42,786 6.51 248,838 6.20
Note: Informal settlers are those residing in a house and/or lot without consent of owner.
58
Table 15. Informal sector workers, by region, 2019
2019
Region
Number % Distribution
National Capital Region (NCR) 937,981 7.37
Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR) 278,848 2.19
Region I (Ilocos Region) 643,579 5.06
Region II (Cagayan Valley) 499,262 3.92
Region III (Central Luzon) 1,196,910 9.40
Region IV-A (CALABARZON) 1,469,437 11.54
Region IV-B (MIMAROPA) 467,498 3.67
Region V (Bicol Region) 823,564 6.47
Region VI (Western Visayas) 979,524 7.69
Region VII (Central Visayas) 994,998 7.82
Region VIII (Eastern Visayas) 675,901 5.31
Region IX (Zamboanga Peninsula) 585,387 4.60
Region X (Northern Mindanao) 687,307 5.40
Region XI (Davao Region) 633,249 4.97
Region XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) 721,525 5.67
Region XIII (Caraga) 388,275 3.05
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) 747,793 5.87
Total 12,731,037
Notes:
Informal sector operators are either self-employed without any paid employee or employer in own-family
operated farm or business.
Annual 2019 figures are the average of values from the four Labor Force Survey rounds.
Table 16. Household population with persons with disability (PWD), by sex and age group,
2010
59
Women and children also face a bleaker scenario as the pandemic put them in highly
vulnerable situations. According to a June 2020 UN Women report (UN Women 2020a), the
community quarantines or lockdowns had the consequence of trapping women and children
with abusive family members and perpetrators of sexual or gender-based violence. Sourcing
Philippine National Police and Department of Justice data from news articles, the report also
mentioned the following statistics on sexual and gender-based violence and crimes against
women and children since the enhanced community quarantine in Luzon started on 17 March
2020 up to May 2020:
Quarantine passes designed to limit mobility in order to curb virus transmission have reportedly
been used as instruments of sexual harassment by a few officials manning checkpoints. The
UN Women report cited instances of sexual harassment and sexual exploitation of women by
law enforcers at checkpoints. It also cited women deprived of liberty being at increased risk of
contracting COVID-19 and facing gender-based violence given that jails are severely
congested. According to the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology, 467 jails are at 534
percent capacity as of 19 March 2020 and women account for almost 9 percent of prison
population.
The pandemic is also forcing women to work more and lift a greater burden than men in
domestic care. Filipino women’s unpaid and largely invisible (not measured as part of the
GDP) work was already worth Php2 trillion or around 20 percent of the GDP even before the
pandemic (Abrigo and Francisco-Abrigo 2019). As lockdowns forced schools, nurseries and
support services to close and concentrated economic activities in the homes, domestic care
burden fell disproportionately heavier on women than men. A recent Oxfam survey (in-depth
phone interviews and online surveys in urban poor and marginalized communities, with 951
respondents consisting of 614 females, 273 men, 63 self-identifying gender non-conforming
people, and one respondent who gave no response on self-identification) revealed that over 50
percent of urban poor and marginalized Filipino women reported increases in unpaid care work
during the pandemic. Moreover, internally displaced persons, single mothers, young mothers,
those enrolled in the government social protection program 4Ps, and older persons reported, on
average, an increase of more than five hours on unpaid care and domestic work a day during
the pandemic (Oxfam 2020).
The Philippine government’s social protection programs in response to the pandemic consist
of the emergency assistance programs which were implemented as part of the Bayanihan laws
(Bayanihan 1 and 2) and the continuing regular welfare programs. The social protection
programs include the following:29
29
Compiled from the President’s reports to the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee pursuant to Bayanihan 1 and 2, March
30 to November 3, 2020, https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/section/laws/other-issuances/.
60
AICS) by the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD)
2. COVID-19 Adjustment Measures Program: Abot-Kamay ang Pagtulong for Displaced
Overseas Filipino Workers (CAMP-AKAP) by the Department of Labor and
Employment (DOLE)
3. Small Business Wage Subsidy Program by the Department of Finance (DOF), Social
Security Services (SSS), and DSWD
4. Livelihood Seeding Program-Negosyo Serbisyo sa Barangay (LSP-NSB) by the
Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)
5. Pondo sa Pagbabago at Pag-Asenso - COVID-19 Assistance to Restart Enterprises
(CARES) Program by the Small Business Corporation (SBCorp)
6. Free Bus Ride Program for Health Workers by the Department of Transportation
(DOTr)
7. Libreng Sakay Program of the Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA)
8. Alalay sa MRT3 Point-to-Point Bus Augmentation System by the MMDA
9. Libreng Sakay para sa OFWs Program by the Overseas Workers Welfare
Administration (OWWA)
10. Augmentation of the Emergency Repatriation Fund by the OWWA
11. Ahon Lahat, Pagkaing Sapat Laban sa COVID-19 (ALPAS-COVID19)-Refocused
Implementation of the National Fisheries, Livestock, Organic Agriculture, Corn, Rice,
and Livestock Programs by the Department of Agriculture
12. Expanded Survival and Recovery Assistance (SURE) Aid and Recovery Project by
the Agricultural Credit Policy Council
13. Basic Education Learning Continuity Plan by the Department of Education (DepEd)
14. Assistance to Local Government Units - Bayanihan Grants to Cities, Municipalities,
and Provinces by the national government
Of these, the SAP-emergency subsidy was the biggest. The SAP-emergency subsidy that the
Bayanihan 1 targeted to distribute to 18 million families30 was distributed as SAP-AICS by the
DSWD. The emergency subsidy was continued under Bayanihan 2 but without a specific
number of targeted beneficiaries as the law mandates its distribution “to affected low income
households in areas under granular lockdown and households with recently returned overseas
Filipino workers”.31 The number of beneficiaries from this Bayanihan 2 subsidy was not
discussed in the last President’s Report to Congress on the Bayanihan 2 implementation
(November 3, 2020 report). The adequacy of the SAP-emergency subsidy under Bayanihan 1
may be gleaned from the simulations done in Section 2.2. The simulations suggest that this is
inadequate under the scenario that only 14 million families benefited and even under the
scenario that the targeted 18 million families benefited because the number of poor families
increase under both scenarios. There is no fragmentation in the social welfare programs
enumerated above because different agencies are directed to address various needs depending
on their mandates and sectors they are assisting, and they coordinated in doing that through an
inter-agency technical working group. But the big problem is the lack of common database for
identifying beneficiaries, which led to the difficulty of implementing cross-checking for
duplication to ensure that implementation is compliant with the Bayanihan 1’s requirement that
the maximum that a family can receive per month is eight thousand pesos or the equivalent of
the regional monthly minimum wage.
30
Section 4 (c) of Republic Act No. 11469.
31
Section 4 (f) (1) of Republic Act No. 11494.
61
Decision-making on the need for the SAP-emergency subsidy was swift and funding
approval was timely but implementation had been difficult because there was no easy way
track the targeted 18 million families. At the time it was decided that 18 million families will
be targeted, there was no list or database which can be used as reference because the target was
based on the 15 million families profiled as low-income under a DSWD list called the
Listahanan 2015 (which is outdated) and then added with 3 million families to account for
population growth.32 The DSWD and the DILG then left it to LGU officials, particularly
barangay officials, to come up with a list and profiles of their constituents who are qualified
based on the criteria released by an inter-agency technical working group and to gather data
through so-called “social amelioration cards”33, which then had to be reviewed by the DSWD
to ensure that there is no duplication of beneficiaries or overlapping of benefits. All of these
took time. Nevertheless, the SAP-emergency subsidy is considered as near universal (targeted
18 million families out of 23 million families, the estimated total number of families in the
Philippines in 2020) and had a very wide reach because all LGUs were covered. The continued
financing of the social protection programs are ensured by the Bayanihan 2 except the large-
scale SAP-emergency subsidy given that the Bayanihan 2 downscaled this to subsidy to only
those who are affected by “granular lockdowns” or neighborhood-level lockdowns. The DSWD
is delivering this through its Assistance to Individuals in Crisis Situation program, which is an
existing program. Given the latest economic contraction forecasts, additional funding for social
protection programs may be necessary to ensure that not many people will fall into poverty.
Such can be legislated. However, at the time of this writing the 2021 budget is not yet legislated
and it is not yet known whether or not the social protection budget has significantly increased.
In the immediate term, implementing succeeding social protection programs can be more
efficient if a database gathered from the social amelioration cards is used and digital
technologies are employed, such as what is being used for the existing conditional cash transfer
program called 4Ps (Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program). Going forward, social
protection programs can be delivered better if a database gathered from the national ID
system is in place and households are given support to enable them to have bank accounts.
Profiling household vulnerabilities can also be facilitated through the national ID system. The
implementation of the national ID system so far has reached 8.7 million registrants for step one
of a three-step process (namely: step one - statistics personnel going house to house to get
information from registrants; step two - registrants proceeding to registration centers for their
biometric capture; and step three - registrants getting their national IDs).
It may take at least a year before the assessment of implementation of the social protection
programs, especially by the Commission on Audit, can be completed, but preliminary
findings on the implementation experience in some programs yielded reports of
corruption during aid distribution, highlighting the need for serious governance
improvements. In the case of the SAP which were distributed as cash assistance, for example,
the DILG reported on 23 August 2020 that a total of 436 local elected and appointed public
officials and their civilian co-conspirators were facing criminal charges and 626 more officials
and civilians were under probe for alleged anomalies in the SAP pay-outs (DILG 2020a). Then
on 12 September 2020, the Office of the Ombudsman suspended for six months a total of 89
barangay chiefs after finding strong evidence of guilt against them regarding anomalies and
32
Third President’s Report to Congress submitted on April 13, 2020, https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/section/laws/other-
issuances/.
33
Joint Memorandum Circular (JMC) 1 Series of 2020, “Special Guidelines on the Provision of Social Amelioration Measures by
the Department of Social Welfare and Development, Department of Labor and Employment, Department of Trade and Industry,
Department of Agriculture, Department of Finance, Department of Budget and Management, and Department of the Interior and
Local Government to the Most Affected Residents of the Areas under Enhanced Community Quarantine”
62
irregularities in the implementation of the first tranche34 of the SAP. According to the DILG,
this mass suspension of elected officials is the first in the history of the country (DILG 2020b).
Erring public officials and their civilian co-conspirators may have taken advantage of
data gaps and information system weaknesses in the SAP system. According to a
NDRRMC report, during the April 2020 implementation of the SAP, various issues related to
the distribution and filling out of social amelioration cards surfaced, such as filling up of the
cards by families who are not qualified, duplication of names of beneficiaries, slow validation
of beneficiaries’ names, and many other issues (NDRRMC 2020). Then the national
government provided an ICT solution, but it came late. In mid-May, the Department of
Information and Communications Technology (DICT) provided support to the DSWD’s
ReliefAgad System to expedite via cloud storage and cybersecurity assessments the collection
of social amelioration card data and the distribution of cash aid to beneficiaries (DICT 2020b).
The Planet and Prosperity pillar is built on the foundation of sustainable development. It
recognizes that growth trajectory of the country as well as its goal of reducing poverty and
inequality will depend on its capability to address the challenges brought by natural hazards,
future pandemics and climate change.
The Philippines has been enjoying strong economic growth until the recent COVID-19
pandemic took the country by surprise, and has since unearthed numerous socio-economic
challenges that are currently affecting the lives of many Filipinos. The alarming increase in
COVID-19 infections in March 2020, pushed the government to impose an enhanced
community quarantine in Metro Manila, which recommended the closure of schools, non-
essential businesses and cancellation of public transport operations. Soon after, the entire
Luzon was in lockdown, along with several cities in Visayas and Mindanao. After six months,
most parts of Luzon, especially Metro Manila, remains under some form of quarantine
measures.
Although limiting the movement of the population seems like a sound idea to curb human-to-
human transmission of COVID-19, this policy decision is not without consequences. The
constriction of flow of goods and services in the entire Luzon is tantamount to paralyzing
economic activities in the main part of the country that contributes around 70 percent of its
gross domestic product. This is very detrimental to the economy. In fact, Q2 data from the
Philippine Statistics Authority confirms the contraction of the economy at 16.5 percent.
34
Based on the final report to the Congress on Bayanihan 1, the first tranche consisted of aid distribution to: (a) 4.3 million
beneficiaries nationwide belonging to the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) registry, the multi-year cash transfer
program of the government; (b) 13.56 million non-4Ps beneficiaries nationwide; and (c) 98,132 public transport service providers
in the NCR. The second tranche beneficiaries were 1.39 million 4Ps beneficiaries and 7.29 million non-4Ps beneficiaries (Source:
President Duterte’s Report to the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee on Bayanihan 1, 29 June 2020).
63
With the end of the COVID-19 pandemic still nowhere on the horizon, the government’s goal
of long-term shared prosperity is under threat. Ultimately, the country’s economic recovery
will depend on policy strategies that will not only consider the current problems exposed by
the pandemic, but will also incorporate the timeliness of the policy responses.
The COVID-19 pandemic affected the Philippine economy through various channels. In this
section, we discuss some specific effects of the containment measures on the operation of select
sectors and how these are expected to affect the long-term prosperity goals.
The imposition of wide lockdown has crippled the operations of many economic activities
within the country. To maintain a safe distance among workers, the government ordered
essential businesses to allow only a small percentage of their workforce to report for work.
This, along with the unavailability of public transportation, which further constrained workers
to reach their place of work, forced businesses to operate inefficiently that eventually resulted
to financial losses for many.
The Asian Development Bank (ADB, 2020b), in collaboration with the Philippine Department
of Finance (DOF), conducted a survey from 28 April to 15 May 2020 to assess the early impact
of COVID-19 quarantine and lockdown measures to business establishments in the Philippines.
A total of 2,481 enterprises participated in the survey, which included micro, small, medium-
sized enterprises and large firms. Majority of the enterprises surveyed are from Luzon (79.7
percent), followed by the Central Visayas (7.5 percent), Western Visayas (4.0 percent), and
Davao (3.4 percent).
As exhibited in Table 17, the containment measures for COVID-19 pushed many business
enterprises to either temporarily close (66 percent) or limit (29 percent) their operations.
Around 1 percent of the respondent firms however, were permanently closed. Judging from the
numbers, it can be deduced from the table that the smaller firm size, the lesser the capability to
stay in operation during the ECQ. When asked about the status of their sales as compared from
the month prior to the lockdown, more than 70 percent of the enterprises signified a decrease
in sales, while around 20 percent said that their sales remained the same. Meanwhile, there is
a limited number of enterprises (around 1 percent) that enjoyed a sudden increase demand
caused by the lockdown. In terms of employment management, the three most prevalent
measures done to augment the contraction of business operations is to (1) reduce the working
hours of employees, (2) grant them leaves, and (3) reduce their salary/wages/benefits. When
asked about work-from-home arrangements, around 57 percent of the total respondents
indicated that this set-up is not possible for any of their workers. Lastly, the respondents were
asked to provide a timeframe from their business recovery. Interestingly, more than 50 percent
of the enterprises expressed that they are unable to judge due to the vast uncertainty of the
situation. Around 30 percent, on the other hand, said that it would take them more than 3
months to recover from the lockdown measures imposed.
64
Table 17. Status of business enterprises in the Philippines in the early COVID-19 pandemic
Market operations
% Engaged in online selling 15.9 11.7 10.9 17.7 14.2
% Exporter of goods or services 5.3 8.0 14.8 11.8 7.8
% Importer of goods or services 10.2 18.2 26.9 27.3 15.9
Share of workers that can work from home without major disruption in operations
% Not possible for any worker 63.0 52.4 47.4 50.0 57.0
% Between 1% and 5% 12.7 22.8 26.0 18.3 17.6
% Between 6% and 25% 6.4 10.2 10.6 10.2 8.3
% Between 26% and 50% 6.7 5.2 6.3 7.5 6.3
% More than 50% 11.3 9.5 9.7 14.0 10.8
65
Firm Size All
Micro Small Medium Large firms
Laid off 1.2 1.7 1.1 1.5 1.4
Granted leave 4.2 2.5 5.4 9.6 4.3
Reduced salary/wages/benefits 3.1 3.7 4.0 7.0 3.7
Reduced working hours 2.7 4.6 7.1 6.5 4.1
A similar survey was conducted by the United Nations Industrial Development Organization
(UNIDO), in collaboration with the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to assess the
socio-economic effects of COVID-19 and containment measures on Philippine enterprises. The
respondent pool includes 235 samples representing micro, small, medium and large enterprises
in the country. Majority of the responding firms were microenterprises (69 percent), mostly
from the manufacturing sector.
Consistent with the findings of the ADB study, the survey reveals that around 57 percent of the
responding firms were not in operation during the ECQ. Although most of them were allowed
to operate, they were still unable to, due to issues with (1) cash flow, (2) availability of input
materials/services; and (3) lack of customers. Microenterprises also seem to suffer the most.
For firms that were able to partially operate during the ECQ, they adapted to the situation by
(1) reducing work/operating hours, (2) cutting operations, and (3) allowing employees to work-
from-home. Work-from-home set-up however, was more applicable for medium and large
firms that were not in the manufacturing sector. Small firms in the trade sector opted to close
certain sections of their businesses to survive, while microenterprises continued their activities
through online platforms. The reduction in operating hours of firms eventually resulted in loss
in employment (50 percent of respondents), and reduction in revenue and production volume
(60 percent of respondents). Firms that resorted to reduction in employment expressed the
desire to rehire their previous employees if the situation becomes better (around 80 percent of
microenterprises). Many firms additionally disclosed that travel restrictions and checkpoints
were the main bottlenecks for their distribution, shipping, and logistics during the ECQ period.
They surmised that these issues may have potentially caused the reduction in sales revenue,
according to 40 percent of firms that were interviewed. Some firms likewise experienced
difficulty acquiring input materials and services during the ECQ due to the operational
shutdown of their suppliers and service providers. The lack of manpower also surfaced as
another issue for partially-operating firms, limiting their production capability. Issues with
workers were attributed to the lack of transportation and the workers’ fear to go to work.
Finally, majority of firms revealed their lack of business continuity plans, which limited their
ability to ensure raw materials, manpower, and implement of work safety measures during the
crisis.
Both surveys of the ADB-DOF and UNIDO-DTI uncovers the devastating impacts of COVID-
19 on businesses enterprises in the country. This is highly concerning since these firms provide
employment to many Filipinos. As long as the social distancing measures are in place (i.e.
limited workers, limited number of customers per establishment, etc.), firms and businesses
will be forced to operate inefficiently. What is implied here is the need to balance public safety
and the economy. The main policy goal is to ensure that most firms and businesses will be able
to survive this pandemic, through the provision of financial and operational support.
66
Labor and Employment
Domestic
The limited operation and the closure of some firms and businesses have major implications
on the labor and employment sector. This is evident in the latest Labor Force Survey (LFS) as
many workers in the services sector suffered job losses between Q1 and Q2 of 2020. The same
is true for the industry sector. Employment in the agriculture sector on the other hand, remains
relatively less affected.
A more specific inspection of the data reveals that based on class of workers, employment is
down for wage and salary workers (especially those working in private establishments) and
self-employed individuals. In terms of occupations, the decrease in employment was observed
for service and sales workers, elementary occupations as well as in craft and related trade
workers (Table 18).
Although not all of these changes in employment can be attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic,
it is irrefutable that this health crisis caused major difficulties in the labor and employment
sector. The contraction of the business/private sector also meant the contraction of demand for
workers. In terms of policy support, it is ideal to provide temporary cushion for displaced
workers by means of financial aid. In the medium-term, it is necessary to reintegrate these
workers back into the labor force by making sure that job opportunities are available to them.
This however, will not happen unless the health crisis is addressed and life eases back to
normal. Finally, the long-term goal is for workers to be safeguarded against these kinds of
economic shock in the future in the form of an unemployment insurance.
Table 18. Employed persons by sector, occupation, class of worker and highest grade
completed (in millions)
Sector
Agriculture 11.0 10.3 10.0 9.7 9.6 8.7
Industry 7.1 7.4 7.8 8.1 8.0 5.7
Services 22.7 22.7 23.3 24.6 24.9 19.3
Class of worker
Wage and salary workers 25.2 25.2 26.3 27.2 27.8 21.3
Worked for private household 2.1 1.9 1.9 1.8 1.9 1.6
Worked for private establishment 19.7 19.8 20.6 21.4 21.9 16.2
Worked for government or government- 3.3 3.4 3.6 3.9 3.9 3.5
controlled corporation
Worked with pay in own family-operated 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1
farm or business
Self Employed without any paid employee 11.0 11.2 11.1 11.5 11.1 9.7
Employer on own family-operated farm or 1.3 1.5 1.5 1.2 1.0 0.6
business
67
2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Q1 Q2
Worked without pay in own family-operated 3.3 2.4 2.3 2.5 2.6 2.1
farm or business
Occupation
Managers 6.9 6.5 6.6 4.8 4.0 3.1
Professionals 2.1 2.1 2.2 2.4 2.5 2.0
Technicians and associate professionals 1.3 1.5 1.7 1.8 1.6 1.3
Clerical support workers 2.3 2.3 2.4 2.6 2.8 2.2
Service and sales workers 6.0 6.1 6.2 7.8 8.5 6.2
Skilled agricultural, forestry, and fishery workers 5.1 5.4 5.1 5.0 4.9 4.8
Craft and related trade workers 3.1 3.2 3.2 3.4 3.3 2.2
Plant and machine operators and assemblers 2.4 2.6 2.6 3.3 3.4 2.6
Elementary occupations 11.5 10.5 11.1 11.3 11.5 9.4
Armed forces occupations 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1
International
Similar with domestic employment, COVID-19 likewise affected work opportunities for many
international migrant workers as many countries are facing economic downturn. The mass
grounding of cruise ships, travel bans and limited airline operations made it difficult for
overseas Filipino workers (OFW) to retain their jobs or secure new contracts. Between
February and September 2020, more than 300,000 OFWs already returned to the Philippines
(Table 19). This scenario does not seem bright for a country that relies heavily on cash
remittances. Moreover, the loss of jobs for many OFWs requires a timely and effective
reintegration program to ensure that the unemployment problem during this pandemic will not
intensify.
Cash remittances are essential for OFW families as these serve as supplementary income. In
the literature, OFW remittances has been documented as an important source of funds
especially during crisis (see for example Orbeta, 2008). However, it is unlikely that overseas
remittances will keep the Philippine economy buoyant since the COVID-19 pandemic has also
brought to halt many economies worldwide. As expected, data on cash remittances generally
is already showing negative growth especially those from Oceana, Europe and Middle East
(Table 20).
68
Table 20. Overseas Filipinos' cash remittances, by country, by source (in thousand US dollars)
2020 p Jan-Jun Growth
Country 2017 2018 2019 P Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun 2019 2020 Rates (%)
TOTAL 1 28,059,789 28,943,112 30,133,300 2,648,019 2,357,902 2,396,624 2,045,913 2,105,650 2,465,333 14,638,297 14,019,44 -4.2
0
Landbased 22,188,962 22,803,600 23,594,054 2,095,045 1,839,458 1,855,240 1,544,972 1,630,749 1,993,794 11,410,730 10,959,26 -4.0
0
Seabased 5,870,827 6,139,512 6,539,246 552,973 518,444 541,384 500,940 474,900 471,538 3,227,567 3,060,180 -5.2
ASIA 5,273,268 5,924,413 6,550,763 614,605 524,620 533,617 446,093 467,924 546,039 3,061,407 3,132,898 2.3
Landbased 3,971,760 4,529,486 5,026,680 489,434 411,357 413,724 336,857 355,540 436,256 2,265,543 2,443,168 7.8
Seabased 1301508.3 1,394,927 1,524,082 125,171 113,263 119,894 109,236 112,384 109,783 794,664 689,730 -13.2
AMERICAS 10,298,024 11,296,425 12,688,784 1,139,183 1,033,383 1,041,986 953,520 906,043 1,142,738 6,029,581 6,216,853 3.1
Landbased 7,662,428 8,704,425 9,901,775 886,846 791,870 816,868 737,708 714,080 949,939 4,706,635 4,897,312 4.1
Seabased 2,635,596 2,592,000 2,787,009 252,337 241,513 225,118 215,812 191,963 192,799 1,322,946 1,319,541 -0.3
OCEANIA 706,078 804,027 787,553 48,535 44,923 60,521 52,827 57,634 65,357 412,636 329,797 -20.1
Landbased 657,449 733,122 687,038 40,880 37,191 37,307 32,264 36,874 44,666 359,642 229,182 -36.3
Seabased 48,629 70,905 100,515 7,654 7,732 23,215 20,563 20,760 20,691 52,994 100,615 89.9
EUROPE 3,857,187 4,153,281 3,979,375 321,236 301,490 272,889 243,012 290,073 278,600 2,022,866 1,707,300 -15.6
Landbased 2,079,451 2,195,744 1,994,338 165,587 156,719 114,017 102,044 156,089 146,175 1,034,187 840,632 -18.7
Seabased 1,777,736 1,957,536 1,985,037 155,649 144,771 158,872 140,968 133,983 132,425 988,679 866,668 -12.3
MIDDLE EAST 7,810,148 6,617,315 5,972,042 512,612 443,245 473,508 334,089 366,943 415,498 3,042,841 2,545,894 -16.3
Landbased 7,763,920 6,576,641 5,923,750 508,438 438,767 469,475 331,228 364,769 412,928 3,018,963 2,525,605 -16.3
Seabased 46,228 40,674 48,292 4,173 4,478 4,033 2,861 2,173 2,570 23,878 20,289 -15.0
AFRICA 115,084 147,651 154,784 11,849 10,241 14,102 16,372 17,033 17,101 70,179 86,699 23.5
Landbased 53,955 64,182 60,473 3,860 3,553 3,849 4,872 3,397 3,830 25,774 23,361 -9.4
Seabased 61,129 83,469 94,311 7,989 6,688 10,253 11,500 13,636 13,271 44,405 63,338 42.6
OTHERS 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 --
Landbased 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 --
Seabased 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 --
Source: Data are based on bank reports submitted to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
The difficulties faced by international migrant workers are expected to directly hit remittance-receiving households. Table 21 characterizes
remittance-recipient and non-recipient households. As shown in the table, majority of remittance-receiving households belong to the upper 60
percent of households in the Philippines. These families utilize their household income mainly for consumption expenditure such as food, housing
and health. Decreased remittances for this group will mean less consumption spending for the economy. Consumption spending is important
69
because it allows money to circulate in the economy during this pandemic. Many small
businesses also rely on the consumption of households. Moreover, having less money to spend
on health of the family is likewise unfavorable, especially during a time wherein precautionary
money for health emergencies is crucial.
In contrast, poor remittance receiving households (those in quintile 1 and 2) are composed of
younger members that are still at the primary or secondary level of education. Cash remittances
comprise the biggest chunk of their household income. Poor remittance-receiving households
generally spend much of their money on food, housing and education. Hence, the sudden
change in international market opportunities may therefore, limit the ability of these households
to send their children to school. This does not only lessen the chance of these families to pull
themselves out of poverty, but is also detrimental to the future human resource pool of the
country.
A. Recipient
households
Household size 6.0 5.1 4.6 4.1 3.1 4.2
Share (%) of households with members aged
0 to 19 98.5 91.5 87.6 76.0 56.8 75.5
20 to 39 76.7 69.6 70.7 66.1 60.1 66.2
40 to 59 63.1 60.6 57.3 59.1 57.0 58.5
60 and over 32.5 37.0 35.5 39.3 35.2 36.3
Share (%) of household members by education
Elementary 39.0 36.7 32.8 23.8 14.5 25.2
Secondary 30.3 32.5 35.3 35.0 25.0 31.0
Post-secondary or 8.8 13.2 17.4 30.8 53.6 31.9
higher
Per capita income 10,243.9 17,357.7 24,812.6 40,238.4 106,434.4 54,491.5
Wages 2,819.4 4,638.2 7,756.1 11,838.3 24,672.0 13,786.9
Entreprenuerial 1,766.3 2,751.7 3,114.0 5,950.6 10,570.1 6,225.8
activities
Remittances 3,946.0 7,448.0 10,048.0 16,239.7 45,565.8 22,932.1
Others 1,712.2 2,519.9 3,894.5 6,209.9 25,626.5 11,546.8
Per capita 10,492.1 16,292.1 21,895.5 33,560.5 80,947.2 43,404.9
expenditures
Food 6,155.4 8,749.5 10,951.8 14,481.4 21,889.4 14,934.9
Education 223.4 373.5 692.1 1,117.0 4,172.6 1,909.8
Health 194.0 370.9 571.8 1,582.3 4,710.7 2,183.7
Housing 901.0 1,726.9 2,501.3 4,530.4 15,258.5 7,143.5
Others 3,018.3 5,071.3 7,178.5 11,849.4 34,916.1 17,232.9
70
Income Quintile All
Households
1 = Poorest 2 3 4 5 = Richest
B. Non-recipient
households
Household size 5.5 4.6 4.1 3.7 3.1 4.3
Share (%) of households with members aged
0 to 19 91.5 85.3 76.5 58.5 44.2 73.2
20 to 39 73.8 73.7 71.0 67.0 64.5 70.4
40 to 59 55.0 56.3 57.5 60.8 56.7 57.1
60 and over 24.3 26.0 26.6 31.4 30.5 27.5
Share (%) of household members by education
Elementary 44.6 36.7 32.8 25.6 11.2 31.4
Secondary 26.9 36.6 38.9 39.1 30.9 34.3
Post-secondary or 5.3 9.9 15.4 28.1 52.8 20.5
higher
Per capita income 9,763.6 16,689.9 24,775.5 40,071.1 109,956.3 36,549.4
Wages 4,195.6 8,342.3 13,834.0 22,722.5 59,468.8 19,651.5
Entreprenuerial 2,627.5 3,744.0 5,128.8 7,550.7 20,860.1 7,313.9
activities
Remittances 1,325.2 1,828.5 2,163.8 2,516.2 2,418.0 2,005.5
Others 1,615.3 2,775.0 3,648.9 7,281.7 27,209.3 7,578.4
Per capita 10,130.5 15,256.0 21,586.5 34,258.7 84,155.0 30,319.8
expenditures
Food 6,072.1 8,538.6 11,265.4 14,913.4 22,697.7 12,054.0
Education 171.8 284.8 407.6 834.1 2,122.3 690.8
Health 241.5 326.6 535.0 1,100.9 2,374.5 833.1
Housing 850.4 1,540.9 2,342.1 4,665.4 15,814.1 4,493.7
Others 2,794.7 4,565.0 7,036.5 12,745.0 41,146.3 12,248.1
Energy
The containment measures imposed to address the health crisis on COVID-19 forced many
businesses to halt or limit operations. It likewise compelled people to stay at home. These
sudden changes in economic operations and physical mobility appear to have also altered the
consumption pattern of different sectors. Table 22 shows the half-year energy sales of
MERALCO from 2015 to 2020, for comparison. As exhibited by the data, comparative energy
sales for the first-half of 2019 versus the first-half of 2020 is lower by 1.7 thousand GWh, and
this is mainly due to the decrease in consumption of the commercial and industrial sectors. On
the contrary, the residential sector appears to have increased its energy consumption by 1.0
thousand GWh for the same period. This change in consumption behavior may be a
consequence of the community quarantine since households were forced to spend more time at
home. Many workers also opted for work-from-home setup due to fear of going out as well as
difficulties in travelling to their workplaces in the absence of the public transportation.
Furthermore, school closures also compelled parents to consider home-schooling and remote
learning for their kids. Although these are safer options, these alternatives also have a drawback
since energy consumption fees are now transferred to households, which were previously paid
by companies and schools.
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Table 22. Energy sales by sector: MERALCO service area, 1H2015-1H2020 (in thousand GWh)
Source: MERALCO
Environment
Placing many parts of Luzon on some form of quarantine measure is like placing the country
on a temporary pause. This sudden slowdown in economic and human activities also brought
several changes to the environment, albeit short-term.
GHG emissions
The containment measures imposed to curb COVID-19 infections has altered energy demand
for different sectors, leading to a decrease in CO2 emissions during the quarantine period. As
previously shown in Table 22, the temporary closure of non-essential businesses has led to the
decrease in energy sales in the industrial and commercial sector, by 1.1 and 1.5 thousand GWh,
respectively. While this may only be temporary, it can still be treated as a bright spot from an
environmental perspective as Table 23 suggests that the contribution of the electricity sector to
greenhouse gas (GHG) emission is very high. Industrial processes also contribute around 15.8
MTCO2e of GHG emissions, which has been momentarily suppressed by the lockdown.
Source: CAIT Climate Data Explorer. 2019. Country Greenhouse Gas Emissions. Washington DC: World
Resources Institute. http://cait.wri.org.
Another interesting point is that one major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions is the
transportation sector, which was heavily affected by the imposition of the community
quarantine. Road transport, water transport and domestic air transport are the top three biggest
72
consumers of final energy in this sector (Figure 9). All of these modes of transportation were
affected by the COVID-19 containment measures, which appears favorable for the
environment in the short-run.
CO2 reduction
Modeled data from Le Quéré et al. (2020) however, confirms that the reduction in CO2 is only
temporary and will rebound back to its pre-COVID level after the quarantine measures are
lifted or relaxed. This rebound is consistently observed for several ASEAN countries, including
the Philippines (Figure 10).
73
Figure 10. Carbon emission of selected ASEAN countries
Source: Le Quéré et al. 2020. Nature Climate Change, Global Carbon Project.
Although the experience in the sudden decrease in GHG and CO2 is only expected to last until
the containment measures are in place, there are is a major positive gain from the COVID-19
pandemic that is anticipated to impact the future. The International Energy Agency recently
released a report on the effect of COVID-19 on global energy demand, revealing that low
carbon technologies are now overtaking coal as the primary source of global electricity, and
this is expected to continue in 2020 (Figure 11). This news is encouraging since the increased
availability of low carbon energy in the global market that can help the Philippines transition
to cleaner energy sources.
74
Figure 11. Global generation shares, by sources, 1971-2020
Source: International Energy Agency. 2020. Global Energy Review: The impacts of the COVID-19 crisis on global
energy demand and CO2 emissions.
Medical wastes
The COVID-19 pandemic has also laid out the importance of medical waste management to
ensure that the current health crisis will not be aggravated by inappropriate handling infectious
wastes that would further endanger the health of the population. A 2003 report by the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) and Asian Development Bank
(ADB, 2020c) reveals that the sources of medical wastes in Metro Manila are: (1) accredited
hospitals, (2) health centers, (3) medical clinics, (4) dental clinics, (5) veterinary clinics, (6)
pharmaceutical labs, (7) blood banks, (8) funeral parlors, (9) medical schools, and (10) research
institutions. Table 24 shows the comparison of results from several studies that attempted to
compile the amount of infectious and non-infectious wastes produced by healthcare facilities
in Metro Manila.
Table 24. Comparative figures on waste generation of healthcare facilities in Metro Manila
Source: Department of Environment and Natural Resources and Asian Development Bank, Medical Waste
Management, Report No. 11.
A more recent projection of the ADB shows that Metro Manila is to produce an additional 280
metric tons of medical waste per day due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This figure is quite
concerning given that the expected value-added of the recent pandemic to the solid waste
75
problem is 6 times larger than that of the estimated total waste production of Metro Manila
healthcare facilities in 2003 by the DENR-ADB study. Furthermore, the recent estimate for
Metro Manila surpasses the estimates for Jakarta and Bangkok, which are also both densely
inhabited cities.
Table 25. Projected additional medical wastes for select ASEAN cities
Infectious, toxic and hazardous wastes are usually treated by incineration or through
microwave. The DENR-ADB report in 2003, unveils that the Department of Health have
acquired 25 incinerators and 36 microwave units for DOH hospitals, wherein 13 microwave
units were installed in Metro Manila. Incinerators can process 300 to 500 kg/day while
microwaves can take 84 to 144 kg/shift. At the time of the survey, two privately-owned
facilities (Integrated Waste Management, Inc. and Chevalier Enviro Services, Inc.) provided
collection, treatment and disposal services to healthcare facilities in Metro Manila. St. Luke’s
Medical Center also acquired an autoclave for the treatment of its medical wastes. The
autoclave can process 330kg/hr.
Given the prevalence of COVID-19 infections in the country, along with the increased use of
personal protective equipment (PPE) to protect medical practitioners as well as the population,
it is imperative to ensure that the country has enough capability to deal with the burgeoning
amount of medical wastes. Appropriate steps towards this direction is to have an inventory of
all facilities that can deal with medical wastes to ensure that cities/regions can handle the issue,
have proper guidelines in handling and segregating medical wastes, and inform the public to
gain overall cooperation.
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the solid waste disposal facilities in the country are those
shown in
Table 26. Since some treated medical waste also end up in sanitary landfills, it is important to
note that in 2018, there are only two sanitary landfills in the National Capital Region (NCR),
where most of the COVID-19 cases are.
76
Region Illegal Materials Sanitary
dumpsite recovery landfill
facility
2 27 724 14
3 31 711 12
NCR - 976 2
CALABARZON 35 894 31
MIMAROPA 19 135 10
5 82 315 2
6 17 1,093 9
7 57 401 14
8 8 881 8
9 2 269 1
10 11 501 8
11 10 1,257 3
12 - 175 16
CARAGA 21 561 4
ARMM - 19 1
Note: Solid waste management facility refers to: any resource recovery system or component thereof; any
system, program, or facility for resource conservation; any facility for the collection, source separation,
storage, transportation, transfer, processing, treatment, or disposal of solid waste.
The limited movement of the population caused by the containment measures for COVID-19
has pushed many to utilize the power of the internet to continue performing their work,
businesses and classes. However, some important questions regarding this sudden shift to
digital and remote set-ups relate to: (1) the appropriateness of the country’s existing
occupations for work-from-home setup and (2) the availability of facilities that would allow
the population to easily shift to this “new normal”.
While some businesses resorted to work-from-home set-up to continue their operations, Figure
12 exhibits that most of the occupations in the country is not appropriate for teleworking or
work-from-home set-up. The figure below makes use of Dingel and Neiman’s (2020)
classification of occupations in the United States based on their teleworkability. This
classification was applied to the Philippine Labor Force Survey 2018. Occupations are deemed
more teleworkable as we go from left to right.
In addition, each teleworkable occupation has a corresponding O*net proximity score, which
assesses the level of riskiness of the job that is rated based on the physical proximity of a worker
to his co-workers. The riskiness of the occupation increases as we go from bottom to top of the
figure.
77
There are two other indicators that are at play in Figure 12. First, the shape of the figures relates
to the sector which the occupation belongs to (i.e. agriculture/industry/services). Second, the
size of the figure indicates the employment share of the occupation. Thus, the bigger the figure,
the more its contribution to overall employment.
Considering all of the indicators discussed above, Figure 12 generally tells us that most of the
existing occupations in the industry and services sector are very risky to perform during this
pandemic and these occupations are also not appropriate for teleworking (see quadrant II). This
then leaves us with only a limited number of occupations (all in services sector; see quadrant
I) that can be performed while we are still under some form of community quarantine. Having
this limitation, our economic growth will remain slow as long as COVID-19 pandemic remains
uncontrolled.
Notes: Share of teleworkable occupations based on Dingel and Neiman (2020); for a complete guide on O*net
score see https://www.onetonline.org/find/descriptor/result/4.C.2.a.3
Digital divide
An additional issue is that not all households in the Philippines have the resources that would
allow for work-from-home set-up (Table 27). Since not all companies provide their workers
with laptops or computers so they can perform their jobs remotely, having such equipment at
home will make the transition to the “new normal” relatively easier.
While mobile phone ownership is generally high in all regions in the country, allowing for
remote communication with co-workers; computer ownership on the other hand is very low.
78
Even in the NCR, CAR and CALABARZON regions were most jobs are located, 60-70 percent
of households do not have personal computers at home. Access to electricity meanwhile, is
relatively high across regions.
Table 27. Proportion of households with selected amenities by region: Philippines, 2018
Dissecting the data based on household income decile in Table 28, we note a digital divide
wherein the bottom 40 percent of poorest households in the country consistently have weaker
access to electricity, mobile phones and computer. Thus, if digitalization is the way forward to
future-proof jobs as well as education of future generations, these households will be left
behind.
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Table 28. Proportion of households with selected amenities by household income decile:
Philippines, 2018
The recent COVID-19 pandemic has perfectly demonstrated how years of economic gains can
easily be reverted if we do not prepare for future threats. A hard lesson from this experience is
that long-term prosperity cannot be achieved without caring for our environment, involving
science in our policy-making and maintaining international cooperation. Moving forward, it
important not only to be cautious, but also be prepared for future disruptions such as the
COVID-19.
Emerging coronaviruses (e.g., severe acute respiratory syndrome, Middle East respiratory
syndrome) are types of zoonotic diseases that are spread between animals and people (United
States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). While animals do provide numerous
benefits for the population, coming in contact with them makes us susceptible to harmful
germs, viruses, parasites and fungi. To prevent future pandemics of zoonotic origin, we must
learn how to manage our environment as well as ensure safe boundaries between our population
and the wildlife. Philippine data shows that the population’s behavior towards threatened
wildlife species has been relatively stable in the past 10 years (Table 29).
80
Table 29. Number of threatened wildlife species by taxonomic group
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
1/
Fauna 216 207 207 207 207 207 212 212 212 212
Land 43 42 42 42 42 42 43 43 43 43
Mammals
Birds 132 127 127 127 127 127 126 126 126 126
Reptiles 27 24 24 24 24 24 29 29 29 29
Amphibians 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14
Flora2/ 526 526 526 526 526 526 526 526 526 984
Notes: 1/ - Based on DENR Administrative Order No. 2004-15 re: National List of Threatened Fauna and CITES
listed species
2/
Based on DENR Administrative Order No. 2007-01 re National List of Threatened Philippine Plants
Forest cover in the country has also been expanding (Table 30) probably due to the National
Greening Program of the DENR, which is participated both by government and non-
government sector (Table 31).
81
Table 30. Forest cover, Philippines (in hectares)
Region/Province 2010 2015
Total Closed Open Mangrove Total Closed Open Mangrove
Philippines 6,839,831.6 1,934,047.6 4,595,190.9 310,593.1 7,014,153.8 2,028,015.2 4,682,751.2 303,387.5
NCR 2,119.8 0.0 2,008.0 111.8 2,106.2 0.0 2,000.4 105.8
CAR 777,972.4 255,551.6 522,420.8 0.0 807,219.6 250,545.0 556,674.6 0.0
I - Ilocos Region 124,703.1 18,389.8 105,285.7 1,027.7 147,602.4 24,163.0 122,061.2 1,378.2
II - Cagayan Valley 1,044,871.9 485,261.7 553,708.2 5,902.1 1,050,963.4 488,033.2 557,187.7 5,742.6
III - Central Luzon 520,704.2 225,351.8 294,331.1 1,021.3 536,565.0 234,839.2 299,826.3 1,899.5
IVA - CALABARZON 264,260.5 69,558.9 175,764.4 18,937.2 271,512.5 107,044.3 145,165.1 19,303.1
IVB - MIMAROPA 917,391.7 97,809.6 746,286.0 73,296.0 947,768.9 110,161.1 769,203.6 68,404.2
V - Bicol 202,444.5 39,645.8 137,825.9 24,972.9 199,378.7 41,148.6 133,825.6 24,404.5
VI - Western 187,319.4 67,167.4 110,146.2 10,005.9 203,789.3 62,024.6 127,365.1 14,399.6
Visayas
VII - Central Visayas 62,033.4 11,463.5 35,797.7 14,772.2 79,487.1 4,226.1 56,223.8 19,037.2
VIII - Eastern 514,819.7 45,947.5 427,179.4 41,692.8 511,961.8 42,667.3 435,242.9 34,051.6
Visayas
IX - Zamboanga 174,391.4 27,643.2 121,058.1 25,690.1 170,970.3 28,775.2 116,920.0 25,275.2
Peninsula
X - Northern 378,649.5 173,962.1 198,308.6 6,378.9 382,356.7 179,007.5 198,132.1 5,217.2
Mindanao
XI - Davao Region 428,917.8 160,083.4 265,955.5 2,878.9 400,613.3 151,822.0 245,290.0 3,501.3
XII - 249,049.8 54,247.2 193,201.7 1,600.9 277,890.7 93,152.7 182,889.1 1,848.9
SOCCSKSARGEN
XIII - Caraga Region 684,156.8 99,811.7 558,447.3 25,897.8 724,772.4 125,937.0 571,785.6 27,049.7
ARMM 306,025.6 102,152.6 147,466.4 56,406.6 299,195.4 84,468.3 162,958.1 51,769.2
82
Table 31. National Greening Program, area planted (in hectares)
Table 32 shows that forest disturbance in the country is primarily due to natural causes
such as forest fire/grass fire/wild fire or long dry spell. However, some people still
practice kaingin or slash-and-burn activities that is detrimental to the environment.
83
Figure 13. Death rate from disasters, all sex and ages
Source: Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), Global Burden of Disease
Despite being frequented by many storms and typhoons annually, many poor Filipinos
live under weakly-built housing (Table 33). Having a disaster preparedness kit at home
also remains an unfamiliar concept in the country. Moreover, around 25 percent of
households in the country does not have any kind of insurance to protect them from
sickness or natural disasters. It is therefore important that disaster risk reduction and
climate change adaptation be at the forefront of the country's programs and policies.
84
3.3 “Peace” pillar
The pandemic and containment measures are affecting the nexus between
humanitarian, peace building efforts, development, and human security in the conflict-
affected areas of Mindanao. To start with, Mindanao has historically been besieged by
three major strands of conflict, namely, separatism, communist insurgency, and violent
extremism. The complexities of actors and dynamics in the conflicts have made
responding to the humanitarian, economic and security needs of the people very
difficult. And those needs are significant as the discussion in this section shows.
There are headways to address the uneven allocation of resources and sharing of
revenues between the national government and the Bangsamoro regional government,
but the dramatically reduced proposed 2021 budget for the Normalization component
of the peace agreement with the MILF brings new risks. In this light, risks to the target
milestones in the Bangsamoro peace process must be assessed especially since the
national government and BARMM leaders are faced with re-emerging extremist
narratives.
To gain public trust and dispel extremist narratives, the new BARMM leaders must be
able to demonstrate that they are better alternatives to past ARMM leaders and that they
can adequately deliver services, including social protection for COVID-affected
households and left behind groups, livelihood programs for the MILF camps
transformation that can be supported by the national government, and mechanisms
(such as timely legislation and creation of institutions) for addressing the many
underlying drivers of conflict.
85
Figure 14. Conflict tree analysis for the three strands of violent conflicts in Mindanao
The armed struggle for self-determination and separation of certain areas of Mindanao
from the Republic of the Philippines partially dissipated when the Moro National
Liberation Front (MNLF) entered into a peace agreement with the government in 1996,
but it was partial peace because there was no peace agreement with another separatist
(though smaller) group that was existing at the time, the MILF.35 The MILF then grew
in size and influence and the formal peace agreement between it and the government
35
The MNLF was established in 1973 and the MILF in 1978.
86
came later, in 2014. The communist insurgency, on the other hand, is still an ongoing
conflict. For close to 52 years now, the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) has
been working to overthrow the Philippine government, through the violent acts of its
armed component (the New People’s Army or NPA) and the political-legal work of its
network of civil society front organizations (the National Democratic Front or NDF),
and then install its own form of government. The CPP and the NPA, while currently
listed by Australia36, Canada37, the European Union Council38 , New Zealand39, the
United Kingdom40, and the United States41 as terrorist groups, are not on the UN list of
terrorist groups. In the case of violent extremism, terrorists employ criminal tactics for
their survival and growth, claim that Muslims will only experience good governance
and equitable treatment in an Islamic state, and some cloak their activities with
imported ideas on religious extremism from foreign extremists. The main perpetrators
include breakaway factions from the MILF such as the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom
Fighters, the Abu Sayyaf Group, the Dawlah Islamiyah Group, Ansar al-Khilafa
Philippines, and remnants of the Maute Group which go by different sub-group names
and exhibit varying degrees of extremism, criminality, and gangsterism.
Co-existing with these vertical conflicts (i.e., armed, organized non-state actors
against the state) are smaller horizontal conflicts (i.e., inter-clan, inter-group or
community-level violence). The horizontal conflicts include rido or conflict among
feuding clans in the social order in Muslim Mindanao, inter-group conflicts over land,
and conflicts involving private armies of politicians or thugs of the local elite. Although
small in terms of size of actors, these horizontal conflicts are numerous and the cross-
cutting membership and family ties can escalate horizontal to vertical conflicts,
intensifying the drivers and exacerbating the effects and consequences of major
conflicts.
The root causes and drivers of these three strands of conflict have historical,
political and economic dimensions. In the case of Moro separatism, historical
injustice can be traced to land dispossession through past state policies and by
commercial interests to massacres of indigenous population, oppression and systemic
human rights violations. Aside from land dispossession, there are other land-related
issues such as insecure land rights due to land titling problems, unfinished agrarian
reform, unregulated encroachment on indigenous people’s lands, and illegal land use
conversion. In BARMM particularly, the inequitable sharing of revenues from land,
water and mineral resources between the national government and the regional
government had been a major point of contention by separatists, and this became a
focus area of the Bangsamoro Organic Law through policies on wealth-sharing between
the national government and the regional government.
36
Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs. 2019. Australia Declaration per Charter of the United Nations Act 1945 Listing
Declaration (No. 2) 2019. https://www.legislation.gov.au/Details/C2019G00862.
37
Canada Minister of Justice. 2020. Regulations Implementing the United Nations Resolutions on the Suppression of
Terrorism. https://laws.justice.gc.ca/PDF/SOR-2001-360.pdf.
38
European Union Council. 2020. Council Decision (CFSP) 2020/20 of 13 January 2020 updating the list of persons,
groups and entities subject to Articles 2, 3 and 4 of Common Position 2001/931/CFSP on the application of specific
measures to combat terrorism, and repealing Decision (CFSP) 2019/1341. https://eur-
lex.europa.eu/eli/dec/2020/20/oj.
39
New Zealand Police. 2020. Designated terrorist entities-List associated with Resolution 1373.
https://www.police.govt.nz/advice/personal-community/counterterrorism/designated-entities/lists-associated-with-
resolution-1373.
40
HM Treasury-Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation. 2020. Consolidated List of of Financial Sanctions Targets
in the UK (last updated 02/11/2020). https://ofsistorage.blob.core.windows.net/publishlive/ConList.html.
41
US Department of State. 2020. Foreign Terrorist Organizations. https://www.state.gov/foreign-terrorist-
organizations/.
87
The political quest for self-determination and recognition of distinct cultural identities
is also a significant driver of separatist feelings. This has also been addressed in the
Bangsamoro Organic Law which devolves greater autonomy to the BARMM than
under the previous setup with the ARMM. Strong ideological belief on communism as
alternative economic system and proletariat dictatorship as alternative political system
drives the local armed communists to seek to overthrow every administration since the
1960s. The idea of an islamic state as an alternative political system drives violent
extremists to attack government forces and communities in order to weaken the state.
Some of the extremist groups benefit from foreign islamist training and financing and
others mix up criminality with ideology.
Radicalization toward violence, or the process through which a person or group takes
on radical ideas and begins to think that violence is needed to advance their ideas,42
also provides fuel to the conflicts especially when planted in young uninitiated minds.
The ease of illicit financing for propaganda and arms purchase, as facilitated through
loopholes in legal frameworks and underground economies, also drives conflicts.
Financing for propaganda also fuels radicalization especially of the youth toward
joining armed groups. Loose firearms proliferate because of poor law enforcement and
the demand stimulated by the existence of conflicts and by civilians’ feelings of
insecurity and inclination to protect themselves through gun ownership, leading to guns
being viewed as valuable personal assets. Extremist groups are also driven by
intolerance and revenues from criminality, including kidnap-for-ransom schemes.
Unfortunately, in some communities where extremists operate, there is community
support or complacency because some locals are kin of extremists and benefit from
criminality revenues. It has also been alleged that corrupt officials and intermediaries
benefit from kidnap-for-ransom operations.43
The immediate effects of these violent conflicts are senseless deaths and internal
displacement. The conflicts also affect the perception of investors on the riskiness of
bringing in investments and maintaining business operations, resulting in lower
economic opportunities for the population. The corruption and compromises in conflict
environments further weaken the institutions in charge of the delivery of government
services, resulting in poor human capital development and low productivity of the
population. All of these contribute to poverty and further economic marginalization,
fueling the existing drivers of conflict and creating a vicious cycle of “conflict trap” for
the population. Socioeconomic projects, cessation of hostilities through the peace
process, governance capacity improvements including greater accountability,
community-driven development, and setting in place instruments for social healing are
among the ways of breaking that trap.
42
This can take various forms such as right-wing violence, left-wing violence, violent religious fanaticism or extremism,
genocide or ethnic cleansing, and violent single-issue extremism.
43
See, for example, Whaley, F. 2016. Abu Sayyaf Militants Thriving as Hostage-Takers in the Philippines, 26 April
2016, The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/27/world/asia/abu-sayyaf-philippines-kidnappings.html
88
3.3.2. Economic and security disruptions to fragile communities and
vulnerable groups
As the following discussions show, the COVID-19 pandemic brought economic and
security disruptions to fragile communities and vulnerable groups in Mindanao,
including those in areas controlled by the major Moro armed groups as well as the
settlements of non-Moro indigenous peoples. Disruptions also exacerbated the situation
of the internally displaced population and added to the challenge of finding durable
solutions to displacement. The lockdown environments also amplified violence against
women and children. The inability of the government to provide solutions to
discriminations and misleading statements44 in the wake of the Anti-Terror Law which
alienate Muslims further, interplay with extremist narratives on discrimination and
neglect in the time of the pandemic. Conveying messages that Islamic schools are a
threat instead of working with local and religious leaders feeds into the extremist
narratives that the majority Christian state is suspicious of Muslims.
Before the pandemic, BARMM already has significantly lower per capita income than
the rest of the Philippines. In 2019, BARMM real per capita GRDP is Php54,020, which
is only 12 percent of the Php457,034 real per capita GRDP in the NCR and only 30
percent of the Php180,528 real per capita GDP of the Philippines (in constant 2018
prices). Poverty is also most severe in the region as 61.3 percent of the population are
below the poverty line.
The effect on employment and receipt of remittances is significant. More than half
reported that they experienced reduced working hours and days, lost their job, or closed
business from March to July 2020. Of those receiving remittances, more than 50%
experienced a decline in remittance receipts, roughly 40% had receipts remaining the
same, and the rest experienced an increase in receipts.
Most of the households confirmed receiving support from the government and
non-government sources. Around 94% said they received aid from the government
and other sources. The sources of assistance are mainly support from LGUs, community
44
An example of this are careless statements linking madaris to violent extremism.
45
From the BARMM-Ministry of Health, 9 December 2020.
46
Mindanao State University-Institute for Peace and Development in Mindanao. 2020. Socio-economic Impact
Assessment of Covid-19 Crisis in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao: Preliminary Survey
Results, SEIA Project of the UNDP. 15 October 2020 powerpoint presentation.
89
organizations, and the Social Amelioration Program of the national government. Some
got support from non-government organizations, relatives and friends.
The pandemic had a significant effect on access to food. Around 87% of households
said they had difficulty accessing food and the reasons were lack of money, shortage of
food supply, and high prices. Skipping meals was, however, not resorted to by most
households as 70% said they did not skip meals or rarely skip meals, 16% said they
sometimes had to skip meals, and the rest were not sure. The households identified food
and medicines as their main needs in the coming months, followed by capital resource
support such as farm equipment, financial support, and employment or business
opportunities.
Access to education had also been seriously affected. Almost half of households said
a member stopped schooling mainly due to lack of funds, access difficulty, and fear of
being infected with COVID-19. DepEd also showed during a September 16, 2020
presentation to the Senate that the number of enrollees in BARMM significantly
declined by 30 percent compared to the previous school year.47
The effect on mobility was sharp. Around 86% said their mobility was severely
affected. Walking was the main means of going to work for 71% of the respondents,
public transport for 15% of the respondents, and the rest relied on private cars, bicycles
or motorbikes.
With respect to effect on access to health services, more than half of the households
said they had difficulty accessing medicines and hospitals. Households accessed
medical care mostly through barangay health centers, followed by municipal or district
health centers, and private clinics or hospitals. On access to health protection supplies,
the households reported alcohol as the least accessible health protection supply,
followed by facemasks and soap.
Most households had some form of coping mechanism. Around 71% of the
households said they did something to compensate for the decline in income caused by
the community quarantine restrictions. Among the coping mechanisms, borrowing
money (from relatives, friends and informal lenders) was the most preferred mode
followed by relying on cheaper goods, reduction in food intake, and seeking help from
relatives. Around 90% said their most needed asset for recovery is capital, while 5%
said they need employment assistance, and the rest said they need skills training and
access to markets. Spending habits also changed as more than half started savings, cut
back on luxuries, and stockpiled on food and necessities.
Most households are optimistic about the peace process even under a pandemic
environment. Majority of the households shared a positive view of the passage of the
Bangsamoro Organic Law as 64% said it resulted in very peaceful and secured
community, 20% said it caused peace and security, and 11% said the situation remained
the same. Optimism is also high as only 3% said they have a pessimistic view of the
prospects for BARMM. The BARMM government response to COVID-19 was also
appreciated even in regions that did not vote for the Bangsamoro Organic Law,
confirming that the peace process has a positive impact.
47
Philippine Daily Inquirer. 2020. Look into ‘alarming’ decrease in enrolees in BARMM, DepEd urged. 16 September
2020. https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1335992/look-into-alarming-decrease-in-enrolees-in-barmm-deped-urged.
90
The regression analysis of the survey results yields important findings, some of which
are summarized as follows. Mobility impact is a significant contributor to income
reduction. Those whose incomes have lower shares of remittance experienced larger
reduction in income, implying that remittances during restrictions are stable. The
reduction in income seems to have a small effect on skipping meals, and lockdown and
mobility restrictions have contributed to skipping meals. The breadwinners’ regularity
of work and income from remittances have no impact on school dropout. Restrictions
and mobility have little effect on school dropout. Those whose mobility was gravely
affected expressed higher satisfaction in the aid they received. Those with higher
expectations for the future of BARMM show higher level of satisfaction with BARMM
response. BARMM satisfaction across areas are ranked as follows (highest to lowest):
Sulu, Basilan, Maguindanao, North Cotabato, Lanao del Sur, Cotabato City, and Tawi-
Tawi.48
A UNDP project assessing the COVID impacts on BARMM also finds that output and
economic activity in BARMM is expected to contract in 2020, though to a lesser degree
than the country as a whole. Under the COVID-19 scenario, the GRDP of BARMM is
expected to contract by 3.2%, which is lower than the 5.5% national GDP contraction
assumed by the study. The study also shows that a more aggressive stance to
government transfers, equivalent to nearly four-fold increase in transfers, can offset the
economic contraction and allow household expenditures to rise especially for the lower
income groups. 49
For its response to the pandemic, the Bangsamoro regional government reported
that it has allotted a total of Php1.9 billion for 2020. The amount is a combination
of re-allocated regular funds and quick response funds of the ministries and offices in
BARMM. But there is no detailed report yet on how these were disbursed. In
September, the Office of the Chief Minister allotted a total of Php155 million to LGUs
in BARMM: Php5 million for each province, Php2 million for each city, Php1 million
for each municipality, and a total of Php8 million for the 63 barangays of North
Cotabato which became part of the region through the plebiscite.50
To support the regional response, the national government also released a total of
Php1.3 billion Bayanihan Grants to BARMM cities and municipalities in 2020. It
is not yet clear, however, what the likely allocation for COVID next year is since the
proposed 2021 BARMM budget has just been submitted to the Parliament and
deliberations are still ongoing as of this writing.
48
Mindanao State University-Institute for Peace and Development in Mindanao. 2020. Socio-economic Impact
Assessment of Covid-19 Crisis in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao: Regression Analysis of
Survey Result, SEIA Project of the UNDP. 03 November 2020 powerpoint presentation.
49
The UNDP project is “Modeling the Economic Impact of COVID-19 Crisis in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in
Muslim Mindanao” contracted out to a UNDP consultant. The first phase of the project involves a rapid assessment
through a social accounting matrix/input-output model, which has been reported and became the basis of the above-
mentioned remarks on BARMM economic contraction, and the second phase will involve an in-depth analysis using
computable general equilibrium modeling, which is yet to be delivered.
50
Discussion during the 23 September 2020 “Peace Conversations for the Bangsamoro” organized by OPAPP via
Zoom.
91
Situation of the internally displaced persons
92
Table 34. Mindanao internal displacement as of 31 July 2020
Number Shares
Group
families individuals families individuals
Group A - those who have been displaced within one month 1,059 5,295 1.44% 1.54%
Group B - those who remain displaced and have been protractedly displaced for more
than 30 days but less than 180 days 1,396 6,964 1.90% 2.03%
Group C - those who remain displaced and have been protractedly displaced for more
than 180 days 70,888 331,063 96.65% 96.43%
Group C area composition:
Zamboanga City (due to the Zamboanga siege in September 2013) 1,362 6,810 1.92% 2.06%
Lanao del Sur and Lanao del Norte (due to the Marawi siege in May 2017) 25,367 126,835 35.78% 38.31%
Northern Mindanao (due to Severe Tropical Storm Vinta in December 2017 and
Typhoon Falcon in July 2019) 29 145 0.04% 0.04%
Eastern Mindanao (due to armed conflict between the Armed Forces of the
Philippines and the New People’s Army since February 2018) 426 1,937 0.60% 0.59%
Central Mindanao and BARMM provinces (due to crime and violence since August
2017) 1,609 6,876 2.27% 2.08%
Davao del Sur (due to earthquakes) 27,323 114,608 38.54% 34.62%
Cotabato province (due to earthquakes) 14,758 73,790 20.82% 22.29%
Other areas (due to various reasons) 14 62 0.02% 0.02%
93
Long standing rido, which add to displacements, are not easily settled due to difficult access to
the justice system. Moreover, the insecurity in the field specifically in Maguindanao’s “SPMS
box” (a conflict area covering Shariff Aguak, Pagatin, Mamasapano, and Salibo), Lanao, and
southern island provinces continue to drive displacement and hamper humanitarian assistance,
delivery of basic social services and longer-term development programs.
As the data show that displacement in Mindanao tends to be protracted, solving the
structural issues underlying such displacement is paramount. There is a crucial need to
solve structural weaknesses in the national government’s budgeting for and delivery of
resettlement programs, continue strengthening the capacity of the BARMM, local government
units, and civil society actors in protection response and preparedness, and reinforce a more
coordinated approach to protection monitoring, documentation, reporting, and response in line
with the UN Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) protection strategy objectives and with
emphasis on reinforcing state responsibility.
Moreover, additional humanitarian support should continue for life-saving and evolving needs
of the IDPs, such as shelter, food relief, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) facilities,
livelihood and emergency health services, and these must be calibrated to the context of
COVID-19 (UN Humanitarian Country Team, 2020). The Social Weather Station survey on
September 17-20 showed that Mindanao had a high hunger rate at 37.5%, higher than NCR
(28.2%), rest of Luzon (23.8%) and Visayas (25.7%), implying a higher socioeconomic impact
in the region despite its having a lower COVID-19 transmission rate. This adds to the adverse
impacts of the recurring conflicts and natural disasters in the region. Overall, this means that
the region will require additional humanitarian support going forward.
Internal displacement due to conflicts and natural disasters is costly in terms of lost
opportunities to earn during the period of displacement. This helps explain the high poverty in
the region. The economic cost also includes difficulties in gaining back livelihood after the
displacement, especially in the agriculture sector where farmers find their land no longer
productive and their livestock missing or diminished when they go back to their places of
origin, and the indirect losses of other individuals who depend on the outputs of the displaced
persons. Using 2018 GRDP data and available 2018 employment estimates for the agriculture,
94
fisheries and forestry sector, the daily economic cost of displacement can be estimated. In the
Mindanao regions where internal displacement is frequent, the daily economic cost of
displacement for agriculture workers can go as high as Php790 per person51 (see Table 35).
Table 35. Estimated economic cost of displacement for agriculture workers, 2018 prices
The limited access to health and other social services of indigenous peoples (who are
collectively called lumad in Mindanao), their food insecurity, and their malnutrition and
compromised resistance make them more vulnerable to the spread of COVID-19 once
virus transmission reach their communities. Thus, any program assistance should take
into consideration their special circumstances. A recent DSWD Indigenous Peoples Plan for
an ADB borrowing opined that based on past experiences, indigenous peoples (IPs) tend to be
excluded from humanitarian and other government services when disasters occur given that
they are often not represented in major decision-making processes. The situation is no different
with this pandemic. The DSWD then highlighted that program assistance for IPs should enable
them to: (i) access medical assistance without any discrimination; (ii) access emergency aid
regardless of status; and (iii) receive information about COVID-19 prevention in simple, easy
to understand and appropriate local languages. As of 31 January 2020, 74% of the 639,014
indigenous households covered under Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) are from
Mindanao, 23% from Luzon, and 3% from Visayas. 52
The search for long-term solutions to structural issues faced by IPs should be sustained
even under the COVID environment. For instance, efforts to safeguard the land rights of
the IPs, whether Moro or non-Moro, through the enactment of a BARMM regional IP
code should progress. In general, the safeguarding of IP rights is primarily contained in
Republic Act No. 8371 or the 1997 Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act (IPRA) but there are many
issues in the implementation. According to Domingo and Manejar (2020), the issues include
delayed grounding of policy, resource and capacity limitations on the part of the National
Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP, the national agency mandated to promote IP rights
and implement programs for them), limited understanding among IPs and indigenous cultural
communities on the empowering provisions of the law, non-recognition of policy among
51
The cost of displacement as a share of GRDP that the UNCT is asking for cannot be estimated because of lack of data on what
proportion of the displaced persons are employed and in what sectors, as well as data on total days of displacement in a year.
52
DSWD. 2020. Indigenous Peoples Plan for “Philippines: Social Protection Support Project - Second Additional Financing”, April
2020 Draft. https://www.adb.org/sites/default/files/project-documents/43407/43407-017-ipp-en.pdf
95
outside stakeholders and interest groups, policy overlaps and tenurial conflicts, and weak
process and anthropological documentation in ancestral domains. Mining and logging continue
to be existential threats to indigenous people and ancestral lands across the country and the
process of securing free, prior and informed consent has not fully addressed this. In the ongoing
armed conflict between government security forces and armed groups, IP communities are
caught in between. Moreover, the lack of implementation of the IPRA, the continued violation
of IP rights, especially on their land, and their marginalization make them susceptible to the
liberation narratives of the communist insurgency.
Specifically for BARMM, the status of the non-Moro indigenous people’s rights is unclear
given that there is no regional IP code that can be considered the counterpart of the IPRA at the
national level. Although a bill proposing such code was recently submitted to the Bangsamoro
parliament, local legislators said that the enactment may take a while as other bills are in the
pipeline of deliberation priorities.53 In the meantime, issues on jurisdiction over the granting of
certificates of ancestral domain title (CADT) in the BARMM arise, as manifested by the
BARMM Ministry of Indigenous People’s Affairs (MIPA) issuance of cease and desist order
to the NCIP in issuing a CADT to an IP group in the region. To de-escalate tensions in the
interpretation of laws and exercise of jurisdiction and at the same time ensure a just treatment
of IP claimants, this kind of issue should be promptly elevated to the inter-government relations
body (consisting of national government representatives and Bangsamoro government
representatives) created under the Bangsamoro Organic Law.
Inside and outside BARMM, the government and its development partners should ensure
that initiatives for IP education are not sacrificed in the ongoing COVID response. The
government has recently taken a closer look at the IP schools operated by groups that are
reported to be non-compliant with DepEd curricula, particularly the so-called Salugpongan
schools in Region XI, because of accounts that these schools were being used as recruitment
ground for armed insurgency. After a fact-finding investigation, the DepEd ordered in October
2019 the suspension of operation of 55 Salugpongan schools and made arrangements with the
school divisions within the areas served by the Salugpongan schools to assist and admit all
students that may be displaced as a result of the suspension. The DepEd issued an official
statement stating that “allowing a school in basic education, catering mainly to minors, to be
used for recruitment in armed insurgency violates the curriculum standards of DepEd.” DepEd
also reported that there are 231 DepEd-run schools that are located adjacent to Salugpongan
schools and of the 1,142 learners directly affected by the suspension of the Salugpongan
schools, 1,000 learners have been accommodated in other schools and 142 are reportedly
missing in the data (DepEd 2019).
It should be noted that the broader context of IP education is in the National Indigenous Peoples
Education Program of the government, which implements initiatives like formal, non-formal,
and informal teaching modalities, the establishment of dialogue mechanisms with IP
communities, curriculum contextualization, mother tongue-based multilingual education, and
teacher hiring and capacity development for IP education. The government is urging
development partners to take this IP education program into account and ensure the legitimacy
of civil society groups through which funds are channeled when trying to assist the IP sector.
However, gaps remain in education services delivery to IPs in the time of COVID-19. In a
recent webinar, E-Net Philippines, a network of 130 partners and organizations that advocate
for education reforms, said that they received a report claiming that around 5,500 lumad
53
Interview with the BARMM-Minister of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs, Melanio Ulama, 08 September 2020.
96
learners were unable to enroll this school year due to the pandemic and that lumad learners
received modules that were not appropriate to their situation and culture. 54 This problem of
access and inappropriate content may lead to another generation of IPs who will be left further
behind and result in even greater horizontal, inter-group inequality, a root cause of conflict. A
comprehensive and multi-sectoral strategy of support for IPs aimed at reducing structural
inequality is therefore needed, and the UN and development partners can assist in this.
As a result of lockdowns, women and girls who experience domestic abuse become strictly
confined with their abusers, making homes unsafe places for these women and girls and
limiting their access to social support. UN Women (2020) reported in June that more than
40% of their 100 survey respondent civil society organizations from Asia Pacific which provide
services to women victims of violence saw increases in cases of violence perpetrated by family
members. In areas beset by armed conflicts and where violence is commonplace, abusers
believe in violence as a solution and the risk of domestic physical abuse can increase under
stressful lockdown environments. In Mindanao, Philippine National Police data show that the
2020 cases of violence against women and children (VAWC) are lower than the 2019 cases
(see Figure 15). However, the 2020 trend shows increases month-on-month from April to July,
which coincide with the strict lockdown months. The occurrence of VAWC cases in Mindanao
is also evidenced by a UNFPA report citing support to 49 women through a “Cash for
Protection” program that protects women from gender-based violence and provide a social
safety net for the survivors.55
Figure 15. Trend in violence against women and children cases in Mindanao
2019 2020
54
“E-Net Philippines and ChildFund webinar, “Advancing Indigenous Peoples’ Rights to a Sustainable, Quality, and Culture-
based Education”, 23 October 2020.
55
UNFPA. 2020. Single mother in Mindanao survives domestic abuse, earthquakes, and COVID-19, 30 June 2020 news article.
https://philippines.unfpa.org/en/news/single-mother-mindanao-survives-domestic-abuse-earthquakes-and-covid-19.
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Before COVID, it has been documented that the use of sexual violence in situations of
armed conflict was happening. Recently, the Philippine Commission on Human Rights
(CHR) condemned the perpetration of such. In September 2020, the CHR denounced the
NPA rebels’ rape of minor girls in Kananga, Leyte and condemned the claims that the NPA
has been recruiting child warriors to join their ranks. The CHR also emphasized that sexual
slavery and recruitment of child soldiers are forms of human trafficking and that respect for
human rights and dignity even in times of armed conflict is a mutual obligation of both state
and non-state parties.56
Recruitment of child soldiers continues despite the special protection offered by a new
law. It has been reported that the recruitment of child soldiers is being perpetrated not only by
extremists but also by the CPP-NPA.57 A law enacted in January 2019, Republic Act 11188 or
the “Special Protection of Children in Situations of Armed Conflict Act”, which is part of the
Philippine government’s compliance with international obligations including the UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child, is supposed to address this. However, although there
had been programs and advocacies on “zones of peace” declaration, the intensification of
programs and advocacies toward prosecution of violators is yet to be seen. Zones of peace
declarations are also difficult to operationalize when ceasefires and peace talks are not in place,
or useless when ceasefire violations are being committed by both government forces and non-
state armed groups.
Extremists continue to strike government forces and use narratives of government neglect
to entice new recruits. In April, while most of the country was under a hard lockdown, the
Abu Sayyaf Group and the Philippine military had an hour-long fierce encounter in Patikul
town in the island province of Sulu, a known stomping ground of the Abu Sayyaf, where the
military suffered defeat after 11 soldiers were killed and 14 injured. In May, the BIFF, which
operates in Maguindanao province, attacked under cover of darkness some soldiers who were
helping implement community quarantine restrictions and killed two soldiers and wounded
another one.58 As had happened in the past, civilians were caught in between the conflict. A day
after the BIFF attack, mortar shelling by as yet unidentified perpetrators began which forced
1,282 families (or 6,410 residents) to flee from their communities even though it was days
before the end of the Ramadan. It was reported that two children were killed and 15 people
were wounded in the conflict.59 Given the civilian casualties, the MILF demanded a joint GPH-
MILF investigation and the BARMM Interim Chief Minister directed appropriate offices in the
regional government to conduct an impartial investigation. In August, twin bombings rocked
two separate places in Jolo, Sulu which killed 15 persons, including 7 soldiers, and injured 77
others. The second bomb was detonated by a female suicide bomber. Military sources said they
56
Philippine Daily Inquirer. 2020. CHR slams NPA for alleged rape of minors, asks gov’t to resolve issue, 17 September 2020.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1336833/chr-slams-npa-for-alleged-rape-of-minors-asks-govt-to-resolve-issue#ixzz6bqDDwCNq.
57
See, for example, Uy, A. 2020. Will Child Soldier Recruitment Ever End?”, The ASEAN Post, 04 October 2020.
https://theaseanpost.com/article/will-child-soldier-recruitment-ever-end.
58
Philippine Daily Inquirer. 2020. 2 soldiers killed, another injured in Maguindanao attack, 04 May 2020.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1269540/2-soldiers-killed-another-injured-in-maguindanao-attack#ixzz6dax8LKaK.
59
Philippine Daily Inquirer. 2020. 6,000 flee as clashes erupt anew in Maguindanao, 27 May 2020.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1281407/6000-flee-as-clashes-erupt-anew-in-maguindanao.
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suspect that the Abu Sayyaf is responsible for the attack, which happened while the soldiers
were conducting a COVID-19 support response.60
Recruitment by terrorists continue and extremist ideas are still being propagated. Apparently,
extremists are taking advantage of the delays in Marawi rebuilding to stir anger among the
disenfranchised and desperate youth. For instance, a video circulated in May 2020 on chat
platforms that tried to renew support to violent extremism. Although the spokesperson in the
video acknowledged the role of ISIS-affiliated terrorists in the forced evacuation of people
during the Marawi siege, he also blamed the plight of Filipino Muslims on the lack of Shari’ah
(or Islamic law) in Mindanao and poor governance by non-Muslims.61
The government is hoping that the recently enacted Anti-Terrorism Law would help in its fight
against terrorism. But negative public perception on the Anti-Terrorism Law emerged allegedly
because the law expands the definition of terrorism, broadly criminalizes intent, blurs the lines
between activism and terrorism, and infringes on rights to privacy as it allows wiretapping and
surveillance. There are also fears within the Bangsamoro that the Anti-Terrorism Law will
adversely impact the status of MILF members who have not yet been granted amnesties and
pardons given that this component of the normalization has not yet progressed. Given the
negative public perception on the new law and the fears by the Bangsamoro people, the national
government needs to allay their fears. Non-discrimination in the application of the law must be
framed well when communicating to the public and, if possible, revisit the recently completed
implementing rules and regulations of the law, in order to address these concerns.
The delivery of the major components of the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro
(CAB), a peace agreement that was signed in 2014, is guided by the timetable depicted in Figure
16. As described in the discussions below, some of these components are encountering delays.
There is an urgent need to address risks to the delivery of these components because these are
crucial for lifting the quality of life in the Bangsamoro and countering the extremists’ narrative
on poor government management in the region as well as the national government not fulfilling
its CAB commitments.
60
Manila Bulletin. 2020. 15 killed, 77 hurt in two Jolo bomb blasts, 24 August 2020. https://mb.com.ph/2020/08/24/15-killed-77-
hurt-in-two-jolo-bomb-blasts/.
61
Singh, J. and Jani, M. 2020. COVID-19 and Terrorism in the Southern Philippines: More Trouble Ahead, The Diplomat, 26
August 2020. https://thediplomat.com/2020/08/covid-19-and-terrorism-in-the-southern-philippines-more-trouble-ahead/.
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Despite the delays and given the progress so far, OPAPP and BARMM officials are saying that
both sides (the national government and the MILF) are on track in meeting the milestones for
the signing of the Exit Agreement in 2022.62
Because the Bangsamoro Organic Law prescribes that the MILF-led Bangsamoro Transition
Authority (BTA) would be abolished and replaced by duly elected members of the parliament
after the May 2022 election, one possible scenario is signing of an Exit Agreement that defines
such “exit” as the conclusion of the transition phase. Part of the scenario is that there will be
follow-up agreements or mechanisms for the delivery, monitoring and evaluation of the
remaining tasks for the socioeconomic transformation and normalization. Note that the
Bangsamoro Organic Law provides that “the transition period shall be without prejudice to the
initiation or continuation of other measures that may be required by post-conflict transition and
normalization even beyond the term of the Bangsamoro Transition Authority” (Section 1,
Article XVI). In the history of peace negotiations in the Philippines, having follow-up
institutional arrangements or agreements had also been resorted to, as demonstrated by the
following cases: (i) the institutional arrangements for supporting Cordillera autonomy after the
1986 final peace agreement with the Cordillera People’s Liberation Army (a faction that split
from the CPP-NPA-NDF), starting from the 1988 Cordillera Consultative Commission to the
present “Social Preparation of CAR into an Autonomous Region” program being implemented
by the Regional Development Council-CAR; (ii) the 2019 signing of the Clarificatory
Implementing Document as a follow-up to the 2000 final peace agreement with the
Rebolusyonaryong Partido ng Manggagawa-Pilipinas/Revolutionary Proletarian Army/Alex
Boncayao Bridgade (another faction that split from the CPP-NPA-NDF); (iii) the 2006
Tripartite Review Process called in relation to the 1996 final peace agreement with the MNLF;
and (iv) the ongoing discussions on the creation of the Bangsamoro Development Assistance
Fund63 as one of the consensus points from the 2006 Tripartite Review Process for the MNLF
peace table.
Given the recent overtures from the MILF leaders on extending the transition by three years,64
such extension is another possible scenario if Congress is open to the idea of amending the
Bangsamoro Organic Law for the specific purpose of extending the term of office of the BTA.
This will allow more time for completing the normalization program. But this will also
introduce the risk of being viewed as “self-serving” on the part of the MILF because most of
the BTA members are MILF leaders. Moreover, it runs the risk of being perceived as depriving
some non-MILF groups from being given a chance to be elected and participate in rebuilding
the region, such as the non-Moro indigenous peoples and settler communities who are supposed
to have two reserved seats each, and women, youth, traditional leaders and the Ulama who are
supposed to have one sectoral seat each in the parliament come June 2022 as mandated by the
Bangsamoro Organic Law. These risks can be partially managed if the proposed amendment
of the Bangsamoro Organic Law would be designed such that: (a) fresh appointments of BTA
members are to be made rather than merely extending the term of the incumbents; and (b) the
intended BTA seats for non-Moro indigenous peoples, settler communities, and sectoral
representatives are to be created.
62
As expressed by both BARMM and OPAPP officials during the “Peace Conversations for the Bangsamoro: Updates on the
Security Aspect of the Normalization”, 25 September 2020 via Zoom.
63
Note that the Bangsamoro Development Assistance Fund is not part of the 1996 Final Peace Agreement.
64
See, for example, Esguerra, C. 2020. Pressed for results, MILF seeks 3-year Bangsamoro transition extension, 13 November
2020. https://pressone.ph/pressed-for-results-milf-seeks-3-year-bangsamoro-transition-extension/.
100
Whichever scenario will play out, an important element that should be present is that by the
time the transition is deemed concluded, the decommissioning of MILF forces should have
already been completed and the MILF should have been transformed into an unarmed
organization and registered as a legal socioeconomic enterprise. As an unarmed organization,
it can be an effective partner of the national government in implementing programs without
creating tension for civilians65 who by then would have been used to co-implementation efforts
by the national government and the MILF. As a legal organization registered at the Securities
and Exchange Commission, it can be a recipient of socioeconomic projects and be a partner-
implementer of the national government and the BARMM regional government for programs
and projects. Moreover, it can play an important role in ensuring, together with the national
government and regional government, that the transformation of former MILF camps and the
integration of those who are interested to be integrated into the AFP and the PNP are sustained
up to completion.
65
The tension created among civilians by the presence of armed groups is counter-productive because this erodes trust and
sympathy, as manifested in the case of the Cordillera peace table when in past instances, certain CPLA members paraded with
their high-powered guns across Baguio City to celebrate the CPLA anniversary.
101
Figure 16. Timetable of the implementation of the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro
Source: OPAPP
102
Delays in implementing the security component of normalization
Box 3 elucidates the work program under the security aspect of normalization, which must be
sustained even during the pandemic. As the updates show, some portions of the program were
already delayed even before the COVID-19 outbreak. For instance, the transition arrangement
for policing in the Bangsamoro is taking time as the executive policy implementing the relevant
provision in the law was issued only in September 2019, and then it took a year before the
guidelines were drafted and submitted to the signing authority. The redeployment of the AFP
in the region was supposed to happen during Phase 2 of the decommissioning, but Phase 2
decommissioning had already been concluded and the AFP redeployment has not yet
commenced. The work plan for the disbandment of private armed groups is not yet clear as the
task force for it has not yet met and ostensibly, this has implications for the program on the
management of small arms and light weapons.
Box 3. Updates on the work program under the security aspect of normalization
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for Cooperation in Mine Action”. The parties committed to jointly undertake mines/UXO
detection and clearance (demining), and mine risk reduction.
● In support of this, the Philippine Campaign of Ban Landmines and the Fondation Suisse de
déminage (or Swiss Foundation for Mine Action) are implementing a mine action project in
the Bangsamoro.
Source: “Updates on the Security Aspect of the Normalization”, Peace Conversations for the
Bangsamoro, 25 September 2020 via Zoom.
In sum, only the work programs for the decommissioning and unexploded ordnance and
landmines seem to have significant progress. The delays in crucial work programs like
disbandment of private armed groups and policing transformation will have implications on the
other work programs linked to it, including the later phases of decommissioning. If not
addressed, these could also delay firearms control and management, deactivation of Special
Civilian Armed Forces Geographical Unit Active Auxiliary (SCAA) previously deployed to
augment AFP forces, yet another armed group in the BARMM, and AFP redeployment. Given
the persistence of horizontal armed conflicts in the region and the presence of violent extremists,
the JPSTs are important in ensuring that there is no security vacuum as the BIAF are gradually
decommissioned. Although former BIAF members are not yet integrated into the police force,
their participation in the JPSTs would add to the confidence level of communities in security
enforcers, especially in formerly MILF-held areas. However, given that the JPSTs are only a
transitory arrangement up to 2022, the work program for policing in the Bangsamoro should be
fast-tracked.
The inadequacy of justice institutions, security and law enforcement, and alternative
dispute mechanisms has resulted in security forces settling local rido, land-related
conflicts and inter-group conflicts, a proxy arrangement that is sub-optimal. It is therefore
important that transitional community security mechanisms such as the JPSTs, the regular
police, representative community leaders, and relevant BARMM ministries like the Ministry
of Public Order and Safety work together during the transition to prevent and manage local
conflicts.
The Bangsamoro Organic Law provides that the Bangsamoro justice system shall be
administered in accordance with the unique cultural and historical heritage of the Bangsamoro
(Article X, Section1). Thus, the dispensation of justice shall be consistent not only with the
Philippine Constitution but also with the Shari’ah, traditional or tribal laws, and other relevant
laws.
However, as the Bangsamoro Development Plan (BDP) 2020-2022 has identified, poor access
to the justice system in the region makes the dispensation of justice very difficult. The factors
affecting this include: (1) little trust by the people in the justice system because of corruption,
clogging of cases, and long and tedious litigation process, with some preferring shortcuts due
to a desire for a speedy resolution and misplaced sense of pride; (2) high cost of litigation due
to inadequate number of public lawyers, limited government support, and private lawyers
taking advantage of this situation; (3) poor implementation of alternative dispute mechanisms
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(ADM) and lack of capacity of institutions implementing ADM; and (4) weak law enforcement
due to limited number and capacity of law enforcers, limited law enforcement facilities and
inadequate LGU support, and proliferation of firearms among non-security agents.
Security forces, being the representative of the government in hard-to-reach areas, have thus
become alternative facilitators of remedies for grievances and adjudicators of inter-personal
and community conflicts. This is most apparent in the support of security forces in settling rido.
For instance, the JSPC has so far been instrumental in facilitating peace dialogues and rido
settlement in communities in Pikit, North Cotabato and in South Upi, Maguindanao. Together
with the GPH-MILF ceasefire mechanisms, it is also currently updating its database of rido
incidents. Going forward, to decrease the reliance on security forces when it comes to rido and
other inter-group conflicts, strengthening the role of civilian institutions and ADM should start
now. Community leaders and alternative dispute resolution mechanisms, using the appropriate
frameworks of regular barangay conciliation system via the barangay lupong tagapamayapa,
traditional and tribal justice systems (for non-Moro IPs), and the Shari’ah (for Moro groups),
have to be strengthened with respect to settling rido and other inter-group conflicts.
To resolve the problem of access to justice, the strategies identified in the BDP 2020-2022
must be implemented in a catch-up mode even under the COVID-19 environment.
Specifically, the Bangsamoro Parliament is supposed to enact Shari’ah laws pertaining to
personal, family and property concerns, including laws governing commercial and civil actions
not provided under Presidential Decree 1083 (the existing decree recognizing the system of
Filipino Muslim laws) and laws on jurisdiction on minor offenses. It is encouraging that in the
recently enacted Bangsamoro Administrative Code, there is a provision on the creation of a
Shari’ah high court. Among others, what needs to be done next is to ensure that district courts
and circuit courts are set up in strategic locations and that there is capacity building for new
Shari’ah lawyers to enable them to meet the necessary qualifications for legal practice.
Budget-related risks
There have been headways in fixing the arrangements for the sharing of national
government revenues with BARMM in order to allocate greater resources for the region
but the substantial reduction in the OPAPP budget for normalization entails new risks of
implementation delays. It is worth noting from previous national government budgets and the
proposed 2021 budget that the national government is regularly honoring its appropriations
commitments to BARMM in the form of annual block grant, special development fund, and
share in taxes, fees, and charges. One of the inter-governmental relations bodies set up by the
Bangsamoro Organic Law, that is, the Intergovernmental Fiscal Policy Board (IFPB), oversees
this. The IFPB is basically mandated to give recommendations that address revenue imbalances
and fluctuations in regional financial needs and revenue-raising capacity of the Bangsamoro
government. Compared with the other inter-governmental relations bodies, the IFPB has been
meeting more actively in order to settle issues. An example of such issues is the previous
request of BARMM to transfer the block grant all at once rather than quarterly. In this particular
request, it has been clarified to BARMM that while the law provides for automatic
appropriation, it does not indicate that release has to be made all at once, and since the national
government has to prudently manage its cash position at all times, a quarterly release is more
feasible. As the inter-governmental relations work shows, steadfast discussions are crucial and
must continue unhampered despite the pandemic.
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However, scrutinizing the entries in the proposed 2021 budget of the OPAPP and comparing it
with the 2020 General Appropriations Act (GAA) provisions shows that for the entry
“Normalization Program in the Bangsamoro”, the 2021 proposed funding is significantly lower
as it is only 15% of the 2020 allocation (see Table 36). According to OPAPP, this is primarily
because of COVID-related budget reprogramming within the whole government. Nevertheless,
the risks entailed by this substantial reduction in the OPAPP budget must still be assessed, and
if gaps exist, new ways of funding interventions must be designed (for example, through
partnerships in the delivery of specific packages).
Table 36. 2020 Actual budget vs. proposed 2021 budget for the Normalization Program (in
Php)
Ensuring that funding-related promises are fulfilled is very crucial in a peace agreement
and this is a significant lesson learned from the 1996 peace agreement with the MNLF,
where little socioeconomic progress was achieved due to mismanagement and corruption
and the promised Bangsamoro Development Fund component has not yet been delivered.
Sufficient budget availability in 2021 is very crucial to the implementation of the
socioeconomic development packages for decommissioned MILF combatants, as well as the
continuation of Phase 3 decommissioning. The decommissioning targets an estimated total of
40,000 MILF combatants and involves the provision of financial packages to help them
transform into peaceful and productive citizens. The first phase decommissioned 145
combatants in 2015. The second phase, undertaken from August 2019 to March 2020,
decommissioned 12,000 MILF combatants, equivalent to 30 percent of the target 40,000
combatants. Another 35 percent is targeted to be decommissioned under the third phase starting
this 2020. The rest will then be decommissioned in the final phase up to 2022.
107
Table 37. Specific projects under the Normalization Program and the implementing agencies
108
Figure 17. Geographic location of the decommissioned combatants
Source: “Updates on Socioeconomic Development Programs” by the Task Force for Decommissioned
Combatants and their Communities, 25 September 2020 Peace Conversations for the Bangsamoro,
via Zoom.
The work program for the socioeconomic transformation of six previously acknowledged
MILF camps, which is part of confidence building measures under the Normalization
Program, is proceeding at a very slow pace. The six camps are: Camp Bilal in Lanao del
Norte, Camp Busrah Somiorang in Lanao del Sur, Camp Abubakar as-Siddique in
Maguindanao, Camp Badre in Maguindanao, Camp Rajamuda in North Cotabato and
Maguindanao areas, and Camp Omar ibn al-Khattab in Maguindanao. The GPH-MILF Joint
Joint Task Forces on Camps Transformation, which was part of the 2014 peace agreement, is
supposed to assess the needs, plan appropriate programs, and undertake the necessary measures
to transform the six acknowledged MILF camps into peaceful and productive communities. Its
terms of reference were officially issued in 2016 but it took time for preparations to kick in.
Eventually, in September 2019, the Bangsamoro Planning and Development Authority
(BPDA) was tasked to prepare the program for camps transformation and community
socioeconomic development. The BPDA immediately prepared a work program and a Php6.9
million planning budget and then things started moving. Activities for the formulation of the
Camps Transformation Plan (CTP) got delayed in May 2020 because of the pandemic. In spite
of the delays and constraints on movement due to COVID19, the BPDA has been effective in
completing the CTP including critical field visits and intra- and inter-community-based
discussions complying with COVID19-related health standards and protocols. The CTP has
been approved by the Interim Chief Minister of BARMM in the last week of October and is
109
awaiting the final sign-off by the GPH-MILF Peace Panels, which is due in November. The
next challenge is funding the actual camps transformation. Article XIV of the Bangsamoro
Organic Law states that “The Bangsamoro Government, with funding support from the
National Government, shall intensify development efforts for the rehabilitation, reconstruction,
and development of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region as part of the normalization
process.” Another possible source of funds are development partners through the upcoming
Bangsamoro Normalization Trust Fund.
Related to this, the GPH and MILF’s joint creation of the Bangsamoro Normalization
Trust Fund, which is the vehicle for mobilizing funds from development partners, should
be fast-tracked. The Bangsamoro Normalization Trust Fund is a multi-donor trust fund
envisioned by the GPH and MILF peace panels as a mechanism to finance, coordinate and
oversee the delivery of assistance from international partners and other donors in the
implementation of the normalization process. As envisioned, domestic private sector entities
may also contribute to the fund as long as there is no conflict of interest and applicable
regulations allow it. At present, the trust fund is not yet operational. Nevertheless, the
Department of Finance has already announced that the World Bank will be the administrator of
this multi-donor trust fund and analytical support within the World Bank is already ongoing.
The 2016 terms of reference for the trust fund specifically mentions that the trust fund will also
assist in the development of the six acknowledged MILF camps. But the terms of reference also
states that the trust fund shall exist until the signing of the Exit Agreement, which is unrealistic
given that 2022 is already near and fund mobilization, actual budget programming, and
implementation of projects take time. Given this, aside from fast-tracking the operationalization
of the trust fund, a revised or new terms of reference may also need to be agreed upon by the
parties in order to redefine the duration of the fund inter alia.
Activities on TJR to date include the joint research project of OPAPP and the Human Rights
Victims Claims Board on mass human rights violations, the integration of Bangsamoro history
into the K-12 curriculum, the filing of House Bill 4003 entitled “An Act Establishing A
Transitional Justice and Reconciliation Program for the Bangsamoro, Creating for the Purpose
the National Transitional Justice and Reconciliation Commission for the Bangsamoro, and
Appropriating Funds Therefor” on 15 August 2020, and initial Congressional deliberations on
the said bill on 07 September 2020.
Given the pillars that guide the TJR work program, namely, right to know (or right to truth),
right to justice, right to reparation, and guarantee of non-recurrence, four thematic working
groups were formed under the Inter-Cabinet Cluster Mechanism on Normalization-TJR Cluster,
namely: (i) Truth/History Working Group; (ii) Justice and Reparations Working Group; (iii)
Land-related Issues Working Group; and (iv) Guarantee of Non-Recurrence Working Group.
110
The Working Groups have already formulated the Draft TJR Roadmap (with work plans) but
this has not moved beyond the vetting stage and has not yet been approved.66
It is noteworthy that the Bangsamoro parliament issued resolutions related to TJR in 2020,
namely, Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA) Resolution No. 56 on 24 January 2020 calling
on the national government to create a National Transitional Justice and Reconciliation
Commission and the implementation of a Transitional Justice and Reconciliation Program for
the Bangsamoro and BTA Resolution No. 58, also on 24 January 2020, calling for the creation
of the Transitional Justice and Reconciliation Commission in the BARMM, a regional
commission. The first resolution is spot on and is an illustration of the needed pressure in fast-
tracking national government commitments. The proposal to have a regional commission in the
second resolution, however, has to be checked for redundancies because having a regional
TJRC may not be very relevant given that the state is the responsible party in most TJR cases.
Moreover, a regional TJRC co-existing with a national TJRC may necessitate the creation of
another inter-governmental relations body.
The TJR activities should be given enough attention. Given that social healing and
reconciliation are important elements of peacebuilding, especially in a fragile environment
where extremist narratives are persistent, there should be more progress on the joint
implementation of the TJR activities. Moreover, the public should be updated on this as
enjoining the public to participate in monitoring the progress of deliverables can engender good
performance and accountability.
Overall, the implementation of the key components of the normalization program has to
be invigorated. At this point, key issues on funding have unmistakably emerged—the looming
OPAPP normalization budget cut and the delayed Bangsamoro Normalization Trust Fund.
These will adversely impact the activities on decommissioning and socioeconomic
transformation. Moreover, there are already worrying signs of loss of momentum on the part
of the national government on security components like policing and disbandment of private
armed groups and in transitional justice and reconciliation components, the work program for
which is still vague. In contrast, the Bangsamoro regional government has been responding
more quickly not only to the COVID-related needs of its constituents but also with respect to
its responsibilities under the normalization program. It has been noticeable in the past months
that the OPAPP has been an active lead agency in the National Task Force Against COVID-19
given that its head was designated by the President as Chief Implementer of the task force and
is lifting a heavier burden in the time of the pandemic. Given this, a re-assessment and re-
drawing of strategies for implementing the normalization program may be necessary.
Analytical support and organizational support from development partners may also be helpful.
Insecure land rights as historical cause of conflicts in various parts of Mindanao has long
been acknowledged and addressing the multiple causes of land dispossession should not
be dimmed by the current focus on the pandemic. A technical report by the World Bank-
International Organization for Migration (WB-IOM) finds that land dispossession in Mindanao
was triggered not by a single factor but by multiple causes, acting either separately or in
combination (WB-IOM Technical Team for the Transitional Justice and Reconciliation
66
As discussed during the “Peace Conversations for the Bangsamoro: Updates on the Security Aspect of the Normalization”, 25
September 2020 via Zoom.
111
Commission, 2017). According to the report, these multiple causes include weaknesses in land
administration and management, policies that were prejudicial to Moro and indigenous land
ownership, unregulated commercial interests like logging and mining, and displacement due to
violent conflicts and natural disasters. Addressing these concerns should be joint efforts by the
national government and regional government (in the case of BARMM) and local government
units.
Since the enactment of the agrarian reform law in 1988, around 4.8 million hectares of land
have already been distributed to almost three million beneficiaries nationwide. However, many
of the ownership rights were in the form of collective certificates of land ownership awards
(CLOAs) and only approximately 53 percent of the distributed lands were in the form of
individual titles, thus, inhibiting the ability of farmers to use the land as collateral for access to
capital. The national government through the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) is
currently embarking on a parcelization and individual titling program in order to address this.
Agrarian reform is also still an incomplete process in BARMM. The new BARMM government
inherited the problem of around 80,528 hectares of land with collective CLOAs that are yet to
subdivided.67 The BDP 2020-2022 also reported that in some Bangsamoro areas, land use
conversion had been carried out without approval by the DAR and were mostly politically
influenced. The BDP identifies as a challenge for the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and
Agrarian Reform (MAFAR) the formulation of a sound inventory of all lands due for
conversion such that it may specifically assess whether land conversion is necessary and valid.
It is also encouraging that the President highlighted during his state of the nation address in
July 2020 the need to pass the proposed National Land Use Act, a proposed legislation that
will provide structures and mechanisms for addressing issues on the competing uses of land.
Being a national law, this can also be applied to the BARMM and may be supplemented by a
regional code if such will be enacted by the Bangsamoro Parliament.
Meanwhile, resolution of land and property issues in the context of the Marawi displacement
is critical in ensuring the full rehabilitation and rebuilding of the lives of its displaced
population. However, the Marawi Compensation Bill, aiming to provide compensation for
owners of properties destroyed inside the most affected areas, is still pending in Congress.
Enacting the bill has the potential to counter extremist narratives on Marawi and win the hearts
and minds of the people in BARMM.
For BARMM areas, the BDP 2020-2022 outlines strategies for addressing the land-related
issues. It must be ensured that in the actual translation of the strategies into funded programs
and projects, the pandemic response does not diminish the development objectives related to
land. As the Bangsamoro charts its own path in land reform and distribution, the national
government must aggressively extend its support such as in the area of digitalization of land
records. In the Philippine Land Registration and Information System, land titles in the
provinces of Maguindanao and Lanao del Sur are included but those for Basilan, Sulu and
Tawi-Tawi are yet to be included.
COVID-19 has considerably added to the already huge governance challenges facing the
new BARMM government and the regional government’s response so far has been well
appreciated. This is borne by the UNDP survey mentioned earlier and by reports that the
67
The figures are as of October 2019 and do not include ancestral domains of indigenous peoples.
112
BARMM government’s response to COVID-19 was felt and appreciated even in regions that
did not vote for the Bangsamoro Organic Law. The positive view on the BARMM
government’s response thus far has boosted the credibility of the new regional government,
which is critical because COVID-19 has been a negative game changer for many governments
all over the world.
The Bangsamoro Transition Authority has formulated the first medium-term economic
blueprint for the region, the Bangsamoro Development Plan (BDP) 2020-2022. Though
the duration of the BDP is too short, it captures the progressive vision of the current BARMM
leaders for the comprehensive socioeconomic development of the region which underpins
governance. While the normalization is focusing on the MILF, the BDP is focusing on all
communities and also highlighting the development of the island provinces in BARMM. This
emphasizes the inclusiveness of the approach of the transitional regional government.
The Bangsamoro Parliament has also recently enacted an important regional law that
will ease the transition to good governance, the Bangsamoro Administrative Code. The
Code has started to address many of the complexities in governing a region where various
cultural identities cry for representation, conflict is prevalent, and access to justice is difficult.
Aside from defining the structure and functions of the ministries, offices, commissions, inter-
agency bodies, and representation to inter-governmental relations bodies, the Code created
institutions which are important for the Bangsamoro access to justice such the Shari’ah High
Court and the Shari’ah Public Assistance Office. It also defined a body called Bangsamoro
Darul-Ifta’ which shall serve as the consultative body for policy-making through Islamic
jurisprudence in the BARMM. The Darul-Ifta shall be composed of the Bangsamoro Mufti
(Muslim legal expert who is empowered to give formal legal opinions or rulings on religious
matters) and six duly recognized Ulama (Muslim scholars who have specialist knowledge of
Islamic sacred laws and theology) representing each of the provinces of Lanao del Sur,
Maguindanao, Sulu, Basilan, Tawi-Tawi, and one from the Special Geographic Area composed
of the barangays that joined the BARMM. The Code also gives attention to the unique needs
of indigenous peoples as it created the Office for Traditional or Tribal Justice Systems. It also
provides for the election of reserved seats for non-Moro indigenous peoples such as the major
groups of Teduray, Lambangian, Dulangan Manobo, B’laan, and Higaonon, although the
policy is still incomplete because the process is still to be defined in a future Bangsamoro
Election Code.
The BARMM regional government is confronted not only with the need to respond to the
concerns of diverse cultural and ethnic groups but also with the issue of accommodating
varying political interests, including those of the MNLF, which is split into factions. The
MNLF-Misuari faction has proven to be capable of starting violent conflicts as it had in 2001
when, after Nur Misuari’s ouster from the MNLF Central Committee leadership because of his
“failure to measure up to the standards of sincere, committed and effective leadership, his
disregard for the needs and aspirations of the Bangsamoro people and his lack of vision and
capacity to steward Muslim Mindanao towards peace and progress”, 68 he declared
independence for Muslim areas in southern Philippines and named himself president of a
“Bangsamoro Republic”. The same can be said of the incident in 2013 when the MNLF-Misuari
faction attacked Zamboanga City while the national government and the MILF were making
headway in the peace negotiations. It is constructive that the MNLF-Jikiri and Sema factions
had been supportive of the GPH-MILF peace process and now have eight representatives to the
68
April 28, 2001 MNLF Central Committee Resolution.
113
Bangsamoro Transition Authority. But extending all legal and political means possible to
achieve peace with the MNLF-Misuari faction has to be undertaken in order to prevent future
conflicts.
While dealing with present governance challenges, the risks to be posed by the impending
BARMM election in 2022 must also be kept in sight, especially since some quarters may
be viewing the enlarged budget as a prize in a region left unstable by years of conflict.
Violence due to clan and political rivalries portends ill for the 2022 BARMM elections.
Electoral violence has been common in Mindanao, and the electoral prize is seen as being
bigger for the upcoming first parliamentary elections in 2022, with more powers and resources
available to elected officials. A program of electoral violence prevention employing some of
the same tools as in other transitional contexts—civic monitoring, early warning and response,
anti-violence pledges and codes of conduct—will therefore have to be implemented. This is a
responsibility not only of the BARMM regional government but of the national government as
well.
In the final analysis, both the national government and the Bangsamoro government must exert
extra effort to ensure that recently gained peace dividends are protected and stakeholders do
not slide back on their commitments.
The UN entities in the Philippines consist of eleven resident funds, programs, and specialized
agencies (FAO, IFAD, ILO, IOM, UNDP, UNFPA, UNHCR, UNICEF, UNIDO, WFP, and
WHO), eight project offices (UNAIDS, UNESCO, UN Habitat, UNODC, UNOPS, UN
Women, UNEP and UNICRI), and two secretariat offices (OCHA and UNDSS). Together,
they act as one team in supporting the Philippine government-led COVID-19 response through
swift actions and comprehensive programs. The UN Country Team is also helped by its
absolute and comparative advantages gained through over 70 years of working in the
Philippines.
The UN’s work in the Philippines in support of COVID response is in the form of technical
assistance activities, diagnostic assessments, and in-kind support through grants and loans. The
support of the UN in the Philippines to the government-led response to the pandemic has been
swift and comprehensive. Supporting as one country team, the UN entities in the Philippines
moved rapidly to prioritize programmatic responses to the crisis, align with national recovery
plans, and reposition itself within the overall humanitarian, peacebuilding and development
landscape (UN Philippines, 2020).
69
Available in: https://philippines.un.org/sites/default/files/2020-
09/UN%20Inmmediate%20Support%20to%20Response%20to%20COVID-19%20PHILIPPINES.pdf
114
The UN response to COVID-19 in the Philippines currently consists of 149 interventions led
by 20 UN entities. Of these 149 interventions, 75 percent are currently ongoing while 25
percent have already been finalized and are having substantial impact particularly in the rapid
health and humanitarian response. The interventions span the entire country and roughly 60
percent of all interventions are nationwide in scope, while 20 percent focus on the BARMM
specifically, followed by the NCR and various other regions and localities. By categories, the
interventions comprise of:
The financial resources amount to a total of USD29 million secured funding for interventions
that specifically address the impact of COVID-19. This amount is made possible through the
support of more than 30 resource partners including 16 distinct-UN managed funds, multiple
funds from eight Development Assistance Committee members and four private philanthropic
donors.
The stocktaking, similar with this CCA, feeds into the ongoing Socioeconomic and
Peacebuilding Framework for COVID-19 Recovery in the Philippines. As the end of the
pandemic is not yet in sight, the priority areas in the Philippines that require increased, targeted
engagement need to be identified. Thus, the stocktaking of the UN’s response has to continue
and be informed by assessments of the socioeconomic impacts of the disease and measures to
control it as well gaps and areas for improvement in the government’s responses.
Even before the pandemic, the UN in the Philippines has a proven record of providing catalytic
official development assistance (ODA), especially grants. Table 38 below shows the UN
support and other ODA sources that comprise the 2019 overall portfolio of ODA to the
Philippines as monitored by the NEDA. The NEDA releases an annual review of programs and
projects funded by ODA under five sectors: agriculture, agrarian reform, and natural resources;
governance and institutions development; industry, trade, and tourism; infrastructure
development; and social reform and community development.
115
Table 38. Official Development Assistance Portfolio of the Philippines as of 2019
The UN System in the ODA Portfolio Review is composed of FAO, IFAD, ILO, IOM, UN
HABITAT, UN WOMEN, UNDP, UNFPA, UNICEF, UNIDO, UNOPS, WFP, and WHO.
The loan under the UN System refers to the IFAD loans. As can be seen from Table 38, the
UN System provided the greatest number of grants (41% of the total count of grant projects)
among all ODA sources. In terms of grant resources, it is the third largest source of grants.
Relative to other ODA partners, the UN System also has a decent record of implementation
performance as only one of its numerous grant projects was behind schedule in 2019 (see Table
39).
116
Table 39. Physical status of ODA Grant-assisted projects
The 2019 ODA Portfolio Review advised that given the COVID-19 pandemic, implementors
should consider the “new normal” and take the necessary project modification to mitigate
negative impacts on project implementation and prepare catch-up plans if needed. For ODA
partners, in particular, the review recommended that development partners should provide
technical assistance grants to support safeguard requirements and continue to partner with
government agencies in conducting supervision or implementation review missions.
In over 70 years of working in the Philippines, the UN has been a trusted and politically credible
partner of the government and society at the strategic and operational levels. As the country
fights the pandemic, the UN in the Philippines continues to bring the following comparative
advantages70 in its various support programs:
70
Given that the comparative advantages of the UN in the Philippines as listed in the 2018 CCA are still valid, these are reiterated
here.
117
It can convene and catalyze, and in some cases mobilize, resources. This derives from
the trust of national partners earned from over 70 years of presence in the Philippines;
● “Maturity”, that is, ability to self-assess and listen to assessments of national partners.
● A very high comparative advantage in taking the long view. The UN agencies in the
Philippines, as one, take a long view and program their activities accordingly, even as
national partners have to concentrate on meeting medium-term obligations.
Complementing the Filipino bayanihan spirit, the UN in the Philippines emphasizes the value
of cooperation in all aspects of response to and recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. The
UN Country Team is conscious of its role to provide added value and complement the
government’s programs. The UN and its government partners therefore will continue to find
opportunities for deepening their partnership to combat the immediate health crisis, limit its
socioeconomic impacts, and help Filipino communities recover quickly and emerge stronger.
The stocktaking of UN support in the time of COVID-19 complements the analysis of impacts
in Section 3 of this CCA and has identified some of the ways forward in supporting the
government, as follows.
COVID-19 has laid bare the weaknesses of a health system that could not secure health
outcomes to be expected from a middle-income country even before the pandemic. Responding
to the immediate crisis while addressing such longer-term gaps requires a multi-pronged
118
approach. Increased cooperation in logistics and procurement will help reduce persistent
shortages in PPE and other medical equipment including for testing and surveillance. Ramped
up training programmes will prove crucial in addressing staffing issues in the health sector as
well as in social services. And broader support for information dissemination will help improve
public awareness and behavior around hygiene, personal protection and nutrition including
over the long term.
The broader humanitarian response is all the more urgent, and complex, given the high levels
of pre-existing inequalities in the Philippines and the insufficiency of efficient social safety
nets. Joint capacity building efforts will expand protection of society’s most vulnerable by
promoting continuity in several service areas currently impacted by pandemic-related
disruptions. These include services related to HIV, gender-based violence, sexual and
reproductive health, and mental health and psychosocial support, among other areas. Further
streamlining of cash assistance programmes will ensure they reach all those in need. Additional
investments in data generation and assessment activities will help to better gauge the impact of
the pandemic on specific groups and guide programmatic interventions to combat poverty,
inequality and malnutrition.
Recovery plans will need to address pre-pandemic issues related to unemployment and unequal
access to technology, while at the same time tackling new development challenges resulting
from the COVID-19 crisis. These plans must focus on improving the quality of jobs, and
boosting the productivity of the workforce through skills training, and investment in
information and communications technology and other infrastructure. MSMEs will benefit
from additional direct technical and financial support to enhance productivity, improve
resilience of supply chains and weather the economic downturn. Recovery strategies must also
ensure equal access to quality education, including through online and other remote learning
techniques, to overcome pandemic-related disruptions. Efforts must be scaled up to accelerate
the adoption of digital technologies to empower individuals, businesses and government, and
ease the transition to the new normal (UN-Philippines, 2020).
The pandemic struck while the Philippine government is conducting an assessment of the
socio-economic development accomplishments and updating the strategies and programs for
the Philippine Development Plan (PDP) 2017-2022 Mid-term Update. The updating then had
to be recalibrated to incorporate COVID-19 concerns. The government’s comprehensive
COVID-19 recovery plan and priorities during the remaining years of the current
administration are supposed to be laid down in the updated PDP.
The lead agency for the updating, the NEDA, announced at first that it aims to release the
updated PDP in August71 but the updating activities being participated in by all government
agencies turned out to be intensive. The document has not yet been released as it was not yet
approved by the NEDA Board (headed by the President) at the time of writing this CCA.
Nevertheless, pending the release of the updated PDP, the discussion below assesses the
evolving national priorities based on the government’s strategy documents and announcements
and offers insights on some opportunities for value addition by the UN.
71
July 10, 2020 Statement of Acting Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua.
https://www.neda.gov.ph/statement-of-acting-socioeconomic-planning-secretary-karl-kendrick-t-chua-at-the-askneda-media-
briefing-july-10-2020/.
119
5.1. National priorities and strategies
As announced by the NEDA, the overall guiding principle in the updated PDP is to ensure
the responsiveness and continuity of strategies and reforms and their adaptability to the
new normal72 and the national priorities to be contained in the plan include wider
adoption of digitalization, more inclusive and job-generating programs, and better
healthcare system in order to still meet the goal of reducing poverty to 14% by 2022.73 It
is also important to note that the timely release and rollout of the updated PDP, once it is
finished, should be a national priority itself given that the document is an important guide for
recovery not only with respect to COVID-19 but also with respect to economic growth and
development. The delay in the release means that the recent budget deliberations at Congress
have not been underpinned by the updated PDP assessments and strategies. Nevertheless,
operating the 2021 budget should be attuned with the updated PDP and the budgeting exercise
for the continued recovery in 2022 should be underpinned by the plan.
The incoming PDP Mid-term Update’s focus on digitalization, jobs generation, and better
health care is in line with recommendations from the We Recover As One report produced in
May 2020 and the Recharge PH set of strategies and activities laid down in September 2020.
These references, which are summarized below, may be useful to the UN agencies in
contemplating their potential partnerships with the government.
The We Recover As One report (released on 29 May 2020) of the IATF-Technical Working
Group for Anticipatory and Forward Planning chaired by NEDA recommended priority
policies and strategies under the new normal. These recommended policies and strategies can
be implemented through programs and projects as well as executive and legislative policy
actions.
Table 40. Summary of the recommended priority policies and strategies under the We
Recover As One report
72
August 6, 2020 Statement of Acting Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua on the 2020 Q2 Performance of the
Philippine Economy. https://www.neda.gov.ph/statement-of-neda-acting-secretary-karl-kendrick-t-chua-on-the-2020-q2-performance-of-
the-philippine-economy/.
73
BusinessWorld. 2020. NEDA revising goals under PHL dev’t plan, 24 August 2020. https://www.bworldonline.com/neda-
revising-goals-under-phl-devt-plan/.
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Sector/Theme Recommended priority policies and strategies
Industry sector Establish a registry of firms, adopt and implement guidelines for
businesses that will be allowed to operate, include activities in the
Investment Priorities Plan that are critical for the supply of essential
goods and construction and rehabilitation of health facilities, explore
the possible granting of incentives such as tax breaks, consider the
temporary suspension of export percentage requirements of export
processing zone locators, conduct an inventory (for possible scale up)
of existing DOST-approved manufacturing technologies for prolonging
food shelf-life; adopt digital technologies (particularly modular
designs and structural specifications) in the construction sector;
provide incentives to construction companies; allow movement of
essential energy personnel; strictly enforce existing policies on the
processing of permits relative to the development of energy projects;
and encourage the importation of petroleum products to ensure
ample supply.
MSMEs Encourage banks to provide financial relief, encourage debt relief
programs, develop mechanisms for real estate lessors and financial
institutions to extend grace periods on payment commitments of
MSMEs, and build MSMEs’ resilience through capacity building on
formulating and implementing business continuity plans.
Services sector Hasten the growth of e-commerce by focusing on speed, security, and
structure, develop protocols in the transport and sale of agricultural
products to satellite markets in communities, promote collaboration
of retail and restaurant owners with delivery service providers,
promote and regulate alternative modes to facilitate shopping
through personal assistance services, and ensure collaboration
between relevant implementing agencies and LGUs to organize and
promptly dispatch or mobilize “rolling stores”.
Financial services Encourage financial institutions to invest in digital infrastructure and
implement better cybersecurity measures and regulations, and revisit
the proposed implementation of the Philippine ID system to consider
tie-ups with digital payment systems such as PayMaya and GCash,
among others.
Transport and Require arriving passengers to electronically fill out a health
logistics services declaration form in airports and seaports, strictly enforce protocols
(temperature checks in terminals, queue markings for physical
distancing, mandatory waring of masks, and capacity limits of public
transportation), reduce passenger load factor, and accelerate
streamlining of customs procedures.
Tourism services Amend the national accreditation standards for all tourism
enterprises to include additional measures under the new normal.
IT-BPM services Adopt a last mile connectivity for work-from-home schemes or
possible alternative working arrangements, issue resolution which
will allow Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) locators to pull
out equipment without being imposed tax or duty during times of
national emergencies, and continue the promotion of the Philippines
as a destination for IT-business process management services.
Funeral services Ensure proper interment of pandemic victims while carrying out the
required health and sanitary protocols.
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Sector/Theme Recommended priority policies and strategies
Governance and cross- Empower LGUs, starting at the barangay level, and strengthen their
cutting concerns capacities as first responders and frontline service delivery units;
enhance coordination and cooperation between and among the
national government, regional interagency bodies, LGUs, private
sector, and civil society to enable whole-of-society response; initiate
the preparation of a national preparedness and response framework
for disease outbreaks and pandemics; fast-track the implementation
of programs for ICT-enabled government to ensure greater public
reach and safer, protected, and reliable ICT; and build the public’s
trust and confidence to enable a whole-of-society response and
recovery to the pandemic.
Social development
Health and nutrition Improve health care facilities, improve epidemiological and
surveillance capacities, improve the status and supply of human
resources for health, ensure fill PhilHealth benefit coverage for
emerging and reemerging diseases, intensify public health education
campaign (including effective risk communication), institute a fully
integrated health information system and database, strengthen and
expand telehealth system, ensure the supply of medical commodities,
and ensure that proper nutrition is provided during emergencies.
Social protection Fast-track the implementation of and registration to the Philippine
Identification System, develop a registry of vulnerable persons and
groups using data from various programs, explore the possibility of
automatic and universal release of aid to SSS and GSIS members in
times of national emergencies without need for applications, and
promote savings mobilization as a critical component of social
protection programs.
Education Expand and institutionalize flexible learning options, expedite the
formulation of a multi-modal, multi-strategy learning continuity plan
by the DepEd, pursue adult learning through online and blended
learning, and prioritize investments in online platforms.
Labor and employment Improve social protection programs and income support systems,
retool the labor force, issue standard guidelines on alternative work
arrangements, and formulate and revisit guidelines on the provision
of hazard pay for workers in the private and public sectors.
Housing and urban Incorporate hazard and health standards in the updated
development comprehensive land use plans and zoning ordinances, explore the
inclusion of open or public spaces, review procedures to streamline
the issuance of housing-related licenses, clearances, and permits, and
prioritize the implementation of the housing rental subsidy program
for low-income informal settler families.
Migration Facilitate the employment of repatriated OFWs through proactive job
matching and skills upgrading, enhance government financial support
to and legal assistance for repatriated OFWs, and enhance health
insurance and social security for OFWs.
Environment and natural Streamline the management of health care and infectious wastes
resources sector especially at the community and household levels, prioritize the
protection and conservation of natural resources especially in
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Sector/Theme Recommended priority policies and strategies
degraded hotspots and critical ecosystems, and ensure water security
especially in COVID-19 affected areas.
The UN may explore future partnerships with the government in the areas where the
work is continuing. The intensive use of ICT is a recurring theme in most sectors and the need
to improve data utilization and management is prominent in some of the recommendations.
The work in these areas is being sustained and is likely contained in the updated PDP.
Improving the health care system, building the resilience of MSMEs, improving social
protection for the labor sector, facilitating the employment of repatriated OFWs, resolving
housing and urban development issues, and addressing environment and natural resources
concerns are also continuing work streams.
Recharge PH is the name given to the set of strategies and activities formulated by the Task
Group on Recovery, chaired by NEDA, under the National Task Force Against COVID-19. At
present, the following priority activities and strategies under Recharge PH are being
implemented using the realigned 2020 GAA (i.e., reprogrammed as authorized by the
Bayanihan 1 and 2 laws).
Table 41. Recharge PH priority activities and strategies
Main Patient
Vertical Strategies Activities Accountable Agencies
Component
OUTCOME 1: Reduce transmission, Rt < 1
Communication ▪ Behavior change ▪ Presidential Communications
communications Operations Office
▪ Stigma ▪ DOH
Community ▪ BIDA Solusyon74 sa COVID-19 ▪ DILG
P
Campaign ▪ DOH
R
▪ Participatory surveillance
E
Transport and ▪ Safe public transportation ▪ DOTr, Philippine Coast Guard,
Susceptible V
mobility ▪ Locally Stranded Individuals Civil Aviation Authority of the
E
and returning Overseas Philippines, Bureau of
N
Filipino Workers Quarantine
T
▪ DOH
Work place and Comprehensive guide ▪ DOLE, DTI, DepEd, Civil Service
establishments Commission
▪ DOH
OUTCOME 2: Adequate health system capacity
74
BIDA stands for the communications campaign wherein the following behavior changes are encouraged: B - Bawal walang
mask (Don’t go out without a mask); I - Isanitize ang mga kamay, iwas hawak sa mga bagay (Sanitize your hand, avoid touching
things); D - Dumistansya ng isang metro (Keep your distance of 1 meter); A - Alamin ang totoong impormasyon (Know the right
information).
123
Contact tracing and Barangay CODE75 active case ▪ Baguio Mayor Magalong (as
D
community finding and surveillance Contact Tracing czar), DILG
E
surveillance ▪ DOH
T
Exposed Test Testing strategy review ▪ Bases Conversion and
E
Development Authority
C
President Dizon (as Testing czar)
T
▪ DOH
I Cases Oplan Kalinga (preemptive ▪ DepEd, DILG
S and alternative to testing) ▪ DPWH
O ▪ DOH
Infectious L Communities ▪ Community quarantine ▪ PNP, DILG
A ▪ Granular lockdown ▪ DOH
T
E
Health facility and One Hospital Command links ▪ MMDA, DILG
patient navigation to public health ▪ DOH
Health care Substitution plan ▪ LGUs
T
workers ▪ DOH
R
Equipment, ▪ Procurement ▪ OCD
Confirmed E
supplies and ▪ Bayanihan ▪ DBM
A
logistics ▪ DOH
T
Financial risk PhilHealth benefits, admission ▪ DBM
protection and testing ▪ PhilHealth
▪ Malasakit Centers
OUTCOME 3: Socioeconomic recovery
R Patient ▪ Stigma, mental health ▪ DSWD, DA, Commission on
E ▪ Social protection Population and Development,
I National Nutrition Council
N ▪ DOH
T Mitigation of Social Amelioration Program ▪ Sub-Task Group on Recovery
Recovered E socioeconomic assistance ▪ DOH
G effects
R
A
T
E
Source: #AskNEDA Media Briefing via Facebook Live, 29 September 2020
Given the authorization to reprogram budget items under the Bayanihan 2 law, funding for the
following COVID-19 response and recovery interventions are being prioritized.
75
CODE stands for the strategy “coordinated operations to defeat the epidemic”.
124
● programs of DOLE such as, but not limited to: CAMP, TUPAD, and AKAP for
OFWs
● DTI’s Livelihood Seeding Program and Negosyo Serbisyo sa Barangay
● DA’s Rice Farmers Financial Assistance Program
● DepEd’s School-Based Feeding Program, digital education, digital infrastructure,
support to alternative learning modalities, and printing and delivery of self-learning
modules
● DSWD’s Assistance to Individuals in Crisis Situations, distribution of food and non-
food items, livelihood assistance grants, and supplemental feeding program for
daycare children
● DPWH local infrastructure programs
The Bayanihan 2 funding expired on December 19, 2020 but the Lower House and the Senate
passed bills extending the validity of the funds up to June 2021. As of this writing, it is yet to
be enacted through the President’s approval. However, it is likely that there will be some
programs which will continue to need support given the low absorptive capacity of
government agencies. It has been reported that as of November 30, 2020, government
agencies are yet to utilize some Php110 billion under the 2020 budget and about Php38 billion
under Bayanihan 2.76 Apparently, some of the funds are mired in bureaucratic approvals and
some are yet to be requested from the DBM by implementing government agencies.77
Given this expectation, the UN agencies can stand ready to help in areas where gaps and
unmet needs may surface and support the overall PDITR (Prevent, Detect, Isolate, Treat,
Reintegrate) strategy in health and socioeconomic recovery that the government has been
implementing.
The acceleration of the Build, Build, Build program, which has been expanded to cover
health and digital infrastructure, and the 2021 budget are two complementary measures
that will improve the recovery prospects of the Philippines, according to the NEDA.78 The
prioritization of the infrastructure program is apparent from the details of the proposed 2021
76
Domingo, K. 2020. Senate extends validity of 2020 budget, Bayanihan 2. ABS-CBN News, 15 December 2020.
https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/12/15/20/senate-extends-validity-of-2020-budget-bayanihan-2.
77
Alegado, B. and Calonzo, A. 2020. Slow Use of Pandemic Funds Weighs on Philippines Growth Outlook.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-10-28/slow-use-of-pandemic-funds-weighs-on-philippines-growth-outlook.
78
August 6, 2020 Statement of Acting Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua on the 2020 Q2 Performance
of the Philippine Economy. https://www.neda.gov.ph/statement-of-neda-acting-secretary-karl-kendrick-t-chua-on-the-2020-q2-
performance-of-the-philippine-economy/.
125
budget submitted by the executive branch to the Congress, as discussed below.
The proposed 2021 budget has a total amount of Php4.506 trillion. This is higher than the 2020
budget by 9.9 percent and is equivalent to 21.8 percent of GDP. The pie chart on Figure 18
shows the proposed budget by sector compared with the 2020 General Appropriations Act
(GAA) sectoral allocations.
Figure 18. The proposed 2021 budget by sector vis-a-vis 2020 sectoral allocations in the
2020 General Appropriations Act
Comparing the 2020 social services and economic services allocation, it would seem at first
from the pie chart that no sector suffered from realignments or deprioritization. However, a
closer examination of the figures show that budget cuts are being proposed in these sectors:
agriculture and agrarian reform, natural resources and environment, trade and industry, other
economic services, housing and community development, other social services, general
administration, and other general public services (see Table 42).
126
Table 42. Expenditure program by sector (in million Php)
On the other hand, the following sectors have proposed increases: tourism, power and energy,
water resources and flood control, communications, roads and other transport, economic
services subsidy to LGUs, education, culture and manpower development, health, social
security, welfare and employment, social services subsidy to LGUs, domestic security, public
order and safety, and general public services subsidy to LGUs.
In terms of shares in the overall proposed budget, as in previous years, the education, culture
and manpower development sector has the highest proposed share, although at a slightly
smaller share in 2021 relative to the share in 2020. In contrast, the communications, roads and
other transport sector has a higher proposed share in 2021 relative to 2020.
127
Table 43. Shares of expenditure program by sector (in percentages)
Shares (%)
Particulars FY 2020 FY 2021
(proposed)
ECONOMIC SERVICES 29.27 29.90
Agriculture and Agrarian Reform 3.59 3.16
Natural Resources and Environment 0.68 0.60
Trade and Industry 0.31 0.23
Tourism 0.15 0.14
Power and Energy 0.18 0.31
Water Resources Development and Flood Control 1.86 1.94
Communications, Roads and Other Transport 15.40 16.61
Other Economic Services 1.00 0.90
Subsidy to Local Government Units 6.10 5.99
SOCIAL SERVICES 36.46 36.92
Education, Culture and Manpower Development 17.78 17.32
Health 4.52 4.71
Social Security, Welfare and Employment 7.43 8.41
Housing and Community Development 0.21 0.09
Land Distribution 0.0024 0.0022
Other Social Services 0.07 0.06
Subsidy to Local Government Units 6.45 6.33
DEFENSE 4.81 4.67
Domestic Security 4.81 4.67
GENERAL PUBLIC SERVICES 18.21 16.07
General Administration 4.80 3.49
Public Order and Safety 7.54 6.92
Other General Public Services 1.00 0.87
Subsidy to Local Government Units 4.88 4.79
NET LENDING 0.24 0.64
DEBT-SERVICE-INTEREST PAYMENTS 11.00 11.80
GRAND TOTAL 100.00 100.00
The proposed fiscal program also shows that the allocation to BARMM, at least in the
aggregate, will not suffer (see Table 44). (The details of how the BARMM proposes to spend
the 2021 program, however, are not yet available because the BARMM executive branch has
not yet submitted its proposed expenditure program to the parliament.)
128
Table 44. Allocation to BARMM, 2020-2021 (in million Php)
2021
2020
(proposed)
BARMM - Annual Block Grant 63,634.08 71,669.83
BARMM - Special Development Fund 5,000.00 5,000.00
BARMM - Share in Taxes, Fees and Charges
Collected in the Bangsamoro Autonomous 2,000.00 3,613.51
Region
The General Appropriations Bill is still being deliberated by the Congress and the target is to
pass it before December 2020 ends. The proposed spending priorities (Table 45), categorized
under the Reset, Rebound and Recover strategies, shows that reviving infrastructure principally
through the Build, Build, Build Program is the highest priority given the proposed budget for it
of Php1,107.3 billion. On the other hand, the health care programs for responding to the
pandemic have a proposed budget of Php203.1 billion.
Table 45. Proposed 2021 spending priorities under the Reset, Rebound and Recover strategy
Proposed budget
Program/s FY 2021
(in billion Php)
RESET: Responding to the Pandemic
Universal Healthcare 203.1
Of which:
National Health Insurance Program 71.4
Assistance to Indigent Patients 17.3
Human Resources for Health Program 16.6
Health Facilities Enhancement Program 4.8
Procurement of Personal Protective Equipment 2.7
Provision for COVID-19 Vaccine 2.5
Purchase of GeneXpert Cartridges 1.0
Provision for COVID-19 Surveillance 0.5
REBOUND: Reviving Infrastructure Development
Build, Build, Build Program 1,107.3
Of which:
DPWH
Network Development Program 157.5
Flood Management Program 125.9
Asset Preservation Program 59.0
DOTr
Rail Transport 106.3
Land Public Transportation 16.2
Maritime Infrastructure 0.2
Expenditures for Medium-term Information and Communications
21.4
Technology Harmonization Initiative (MITHI)
129
Of which:
Adapting to the Post-COVID Life 7.6
Telecommunication Infrastructure 4.7
Education 2.0
Defense and Justice 0.556
Labor 0.112
Industry 0.090
Social Protection 0.039
Transportation 0.035
Health 0.022
RECOVER: Adapting to the Post-Pandemic Life
Food Security
Irrigation Services (NIA) 31.5
DA’s National Commodity Programs 24.0
Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Program 10.0
Assistance to Farmers 2.1
Industry and Livelihood
Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvantaged/Displaced Workers
9.9
and Government Internship Program
Emergency Repatriation Program 6.2
Training for Work Scholarship Program 3.6
MSME Development Program 2.3
Social Protection
Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program 113.8
Social Pension for Indigent Senior Citizens 23.2
Financial Assistance (Protective Services for Individuals and Families in
12.0
Difficult Circumstances)
Education
State Universities and Colleges 83.3
Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education 47.1
Education Assistance and Subsidies 27.9
Basic Education Facilities 24.1
DepEd Computerization Program 9.0
Governance and Crosscutting Concerns
National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict 19.1
Philippine Identification System 4.1
Source: Department of Budget and Management, as presented in the September 4, 2020 budget hearing
Table 46 below shows the top 10 departments with the highest proposed allocation for 2021.
Relative to the 2020 COVID-adjusted GAA, the proposed 2021 budget of the DOH is only
14.3% higher and that of the DSWD is 53.3% lower. The proposed 2021 budget of the
Department of Agriculture is 6.2% lower and that of the DOLE is only 17% higher. In contrast,
the DPWH and the DOTr saw their proposed budgets increase substantially by 52% and 70.5%,
respectively.
130
Table 46. Top 10 departments, proposed allocation in 2021 vis-à-vis COVID-adjusted GAA
2020
Note: 2020 GAA figures already reflect adjustments made to redirect funds for COVID-19 response.
The proposed 2021 share for the Department of Health includes PhP71.4 billion allocation for the Philippine Health
Insurance Corporation.
Source: 2021 Budget at a Glance (Proposed) by the Department of Budget and Management
These budget programming patterns reflect a strategy that treats health care and social
protection spending without the sense of urgency that is needed in the time of a global
pandemic and high social anxiety. Apparently, the infrastructure program is being given high
priority by the national government because the 2021 economic growth is expected to be pulled
up by investment spending for and employment generation from the infrastructure buildup.
Moreover, it complies with the target of the current administration to spend more than 5% of
GDP for infrastructure annually. The proposed infrastructure budget for 2021 is 5.4% of GDP.
It cannot be argued that infrastructure spending has long-term consequences for economic
growth, but health care and social protection in this direst of times in recent memory involve
matters of life and death which cannot be postponed.
131
5.2. Opportunities for value addition by the UN in the Philippines
The comparative advantages of the UN in the Philippines enhance its resources for adding
value to the national priorities and strategies in fighting the pandemic and recovering from it.
Its normative role in advancing the SDGs and international treaty obligations as well as its
convening power make it in a strong and strategic position to forge partnerships not only with
the Philippine government but also with international financing institutions and other
development partners. Its expertise spread across multiple UN agencies enables it to provide a
good balance of highly specialized and cross-cutting assistance.
Given the national priorities and recent developments in the government’s response to the
pandemic, the opportunities where the UN entities in the Philippines can add value the most
are emerging. Possible ways of supporting the government have been identified in the
preceding discussion of national priorities, such as identifying gaps and unmet needs that may
arise due to the low capacity of government agencies to absorb the Bayanihan 2 funds and
supporting the “Prevent, Detect, Isolate, Treat, and Reintegrate” strategy in health and
socioeconomic recovery. Other opportunities for value addition are discussed below.
The importance of the size of the health and social protection budget, including the budget
requirements for the vaccine and its equitable distribution, cannot be discounted. As the
Philippine economy is heavily dependent on consumption spending, recovery will depend in
large part on building consumer confidence, which in turn will bounce back when the Filipino
public sees that the health care system is adequate and the health programs are working.
Moreover, given the lower earnings by the poor, especially the daily wage earners, and the
heavier economic and health care burden on them during the pandemic, generous social
protection programs are necessary.
As mentioned earlier, the Philippines’ total policy response package is fourth from the bottom
among ASEAN countries. That the health care and social protection spending of the Philippines
is low relative to its ASEAN neighbors has also been remarked upon by former Secretary of
Socioeconomic Planning Ernesto Pernia.79 In addition, Pernia observes that despite other
ASEAN countries’ ramping up their COVID-19 response spending, credit rating agencies still
maintained their ratings on these countries, which imply that the ratings agencies may have
already adjusted their standards in the time of the pandemic. This bolsters the argument for
increased spending to fortify the health system capacity, including retention and hiring of
health care workers through higher compensation, and build or improve social infrastructure
down to the provinces.
Potential gaps in social services delivery in 2021 may occur if the level of national government
budget for health care and social protection remains as currently proposed. It is thus necessary
for the UN system to be poised to support wherever the gaps will emerge. Other development
partners may also be contemplating on doing the same. Closer monitoring of the needs on the
ground and the responsiveness of the programs will be necessary, especially the programs
79
Pernia, E. 2020. Health is economy, 24 October 2020. https://opinion.inquirer.net/134712/health-is-economy.
132
under Reset: Responding to the Pandemic and Recover: Adapting to the Post-Pandemic Life of
the 2021 budget. Gaps currently exist in food security measures, as suggested by the high
hunger rate surfacing through SWS surveys. Gaps may also emerge in the fair and equitable
distribution of vaccines, especially in stages 5 to 7 of the 7-stage Philippine vaccination plan
(see Box 4) given the high inequality in logistics infrastructure and health workforce across
geographic regions. In addressing the gaps together with the Philippine government, a human
rights-based approach must be employed as this can contribute to eradicating poverty and
reducing inequality. A human rights-based social protection system entails “defining social
protection neither as an emergency response to a situation of crisis, nor as charity--rather as a
set of permanent entitlements prescribed by domestic legislation, defining individuals as rights-
holders, and guaranteeing them access to independent claims mechanisms if they are denied
the benefits for which they qualify” (UN Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty and Human
Rights, 2020).
133
This is when vaccination begins. According to a report, around 60 to 70 million Filipinos
will be inoculated within three to five years.
Agencies involved: DOH, national and local government agencies, and the local
government units.
Source: National Task Force Against COVID-19 as cited in ExploreSCM Digital Supply
Chain Insights. 2020. Here is the Philippines’ Covid-19 vaccine distribution plan, 02
December 2020. https://explorescm.com/here-is-the-philippines-covid-19-vaccine-
distribution-plan/.
Supporting the transition toward increased LGU resources and greater devolution
Another key government action that may necessitate development partners’ support is the 2022
implementation of the Supreme Court ruling on the Mandanas-Garcia petition on the LGUs’
just share in national taxes. The Supreme Court decision states that the base for calculating the
just share of LGUs shall be all national taxes, including customs duties and other taxes, and
not just internal revenue collections of the Bureau of Internal Revenue.
The new computation will result in additional aggregate internal revenue allotment (IRA) for
LGUs of around Php234.4 billion in 2022, equivalent to 0.92 percent of GDP, and will translate
to a lower national government share in taxes and therefore lesser fiscal space for new and
existing national government programs.80 The year 2021 is transition year toward the
implementation of the ruling. Because the national government has been implementing
programs which are part of the devolved functions of LGUs per the 1991 Local Government
Code, the general strategy that the national government is considering is to devolve (some say
“re-devolve”) these programs to LGUs in keeping with the provisions of the Code.
Assessments by the DBM and other national agencies indicate that around Php404.5 billion
worth of programs may be devolved to LGUs.81 The DBM is therefore eyeing that the aggregate
of those programs under the national government be reduced by at least half through
devolution.82
In the 2021 budget programming exercise, the DBM asked national government agencies to
prepare for the devolution in 2022 and to include in their 2021 budget proposals the funding
requirements for building the capacities of both the agencies and the LGUs to deliver the
devolved services.83 But capacity building is just one part of the needed interventions. Manasan
(2020) opined that there may be a need for equalization grants as some LGUs will have IRA
increases that are less than what they would need if they were to provide the devolved services
80
Development Budget Coordinating Committee. 2020. Fiscal Risks Statement 2021.
81
Ibid.
82
DBM. 2020. National Budget Memorandum No. 136.
83
Ibid.
134
that are comparable to the levels being provided by national agencies before devolution.
Moreover, to encourage LGUs to prioritize the right spending, there is a need to create local
demand for services by raising public awareness on functional assignments of the national
government vis-à-vis those of the LGUs and by engaging citizens and civil society to
participate in local planning and budgeting. For these interventions, the UN agencies may be
able to extend support, which may be delivered in the form of partnerships not only with
national government agencies but also with LGUs and LGU associations or leagues (e.g.,
League of Provinces in the Philippines, League of Cities in the Philippines, League of
Municipalities in the Philippines, and Union of Local Authorities of the Philippines). The UN
through its convening power is in a good position to lead other development partners in doing
this because of its leadership in SDGs, which have been internalized already by the LGUs
through the localization efforts of the DILG and the NEDA.
In the time of the pandemic, the transition toward increasing LGU resources in light of the
Supreme Court ruling on the Mandanas case can start in rural areas where LGUs have smaller
resources and lower capabilities. At present, there is inadequate information on the impact of
the pandemic on rural areas and the readiness of rural areas to deal with the pandemic once it
reaches them. Nevertheless, the We Recover As One report gave initial indication of the
impacts on the agriculture sector during the early days of the lockdown. Of the 6,863
respondents to the April 3-7, 2020 business survey for the agriculture and fisheries sector, 86
percent were able to continue their agricultural activities and the remaining 14 percent had their
activities disrupted during the mid-March to early April enhanced community quarantine when
supply chain disruptions were most severe. Moreover, only 65 percent were able to sell their
produce, with the total direct losses from unsold produce amounting to Php94.3 million. News
abound also on how the combination of lockdowns and low demand due to closure of
restaurants have affected deliveries of perishables like vegetables, fruits and fish from
agricultural areas to cities, with dramatic footages of farmers and fisherfolks eventually
abandoning their produce. Although not yet systematically measured, the impact on rural
employment in the agriculture sector is likely to be substantial given these past developments.
The spread of COVID-19 in rural areas is also a scenario that must be prepared for, and avoided
as much as possible. The recent experience in India on what their local media called as “the
rural surge” provides lessons on the importance of communication campaign and behavioral
change. It was reported that although vigorous public awareness campaigns have left the
populace in Indian megacities on guard, the situation in rural India is very much different
because villagers resist the campaign and believe that the government is showing no sensitivity
to the economic hardships that they are suffering. In many villages, people refuse to wear
masks, do not practice social distancing, refuse to get tested for fear of losing their jobs should
the test yield positive, and hide their illness because of social stigma. 84 It is clear from this
experience that a combination of addressing the economic needs of rural folks and vigorous
information and education campaigns should be part of the strategy for rural areas.
UN support to rural areas can come in the form of complementary programs for sub-national
structures like local government units and leagues of local governments, in close coordination
with or through the facilitation of the DILG. These can complement national government
84
Singh, K. and Gettleman, J. 2020. ‘Rural Surge’ Propels India Toward More Covid-19 Infections Than U.S. New York Times,
08 October 2020. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/08/world/asia/india-covid-19-rural.html
135
transfers in 2020 that are in the form of the Local Government Support Fund (LGSF) and the
Bayanihan Grants to cities, municipalities and provinces. For 2021, the programs to watch out
for are the transfers from the national government to LGUs under the LGSF at a proposed
amount of Php28.8 billion, which is on top of the automatically appropriated internal revenue
allotment of Php695.5 billion. The UN system can also create a niche in directly supporting
rural LGUs in information and education campaigns regarding the pandemic in order to help
avoid rural clusters of outbreak such as what are happening in India.
MSMEs, including those in the informal sector, play a vital role in the Philippine economy
because of this sector’s contribution to domestic employment. The experience with COVID-
19, however, revealed the sector’s vulnerability to shocks, resulting in either closure or
constrained operation of many firms and businesses. The main difficulties faced by firms and
businesses during the lockdown are those related to managing their supply or value chain and
their workforce. The lack of clear and responsive business continuity plans for majority of the
firms, especially in small and micro enterprises, highlights the need for support, not only during
the COVID-19 pandemic but also during the recovery period.
While there are various government initiatives and programs to manage the impact of the
pandemic on MSMEs, much still needs to be done to ensure the revitalization of the MSME
sector. There are many cooperation areas in which the UN can help the government to improve
the chance of survival of MSMEs and make them resilient to future economic disruptions.
Priority on the list is to help the private sector assess risks and allow them to appreciate the
value of having a business continuity plan so that they may be able to protect their production
and supply chain against pandemics or natural disasters. Parallel to this effort is to strengthen
and update policies related to the resiliency of supply or value chains and setting up standards
or guidelines for business continuity plans in times of economic disruptions. In addition, better
management of human resources, that is, ensuring the safe mobility of workers during
pandemics and disasters, as well as putting up social safety nets for them, should likewise be
part of any business resiliency plan. Furthermore, policies and initiatives that foster innovation,
technology adoption, and the use of e-commerce should be pushed and expedited as firms
adjust to the “new normal”.
The unsustainable use of natural resources along with the environmental changes driven by
climate change has resulted in extreme natural disasters and has placed the Philippines and its
population in a highly vulnerable state. The overlapping of COVID-19 pandemic with other
natural events such as the eruption of the Taal volcano, typhoon Rolly, typhoon Ulysses, and
the flooding in Marikina, Rizal, Pampanga, Bulacan and Cagayan, underscores the need to
integrate disaster risk reduction in both local and national policies.
The creation of the Climate Change Commission (CCC) in 2010 is a step towards achieving a
climate-resilient Philippines. This institution is the head policy-making body of the country
that coordinates, monitors, and evaluates government programs to ensure mainstreaming of
climate change in the national, local and sectoral development plans. However, the CCC’s
work program is slow in progressing and may benefit largely from the support and assistance
of the UN. There are several areas for cooperation that can be explored to improve disaster-
preparedness and climate resiliency in the country. For instance, it is important to push forward
136
the idea of setting up a detailed database for disaster and climate change monitoring, which
will be more useful when disaggregated by location, age, sex, disability, and other relevant
information. Strengthening the capacity of local governments to handle risks and disasters can
be done by providing recommendations and standards for land use, forest use, building codes,
and others. Local governments should also be trained to develop and operationalize
typhoon/flood/drought management and monitoring system, as well as early warning systems
in times of disasters. Investment in resilient infrastructure such as evacuation/multipurpose
buildings with electricity, clean water and public rest rooms, is of high importance. Community
volunteers, organizations, and the local population could also benefit from resilience-building
trainings. Lastly, the country could gain from knowledge sharing and information exchange on
climate change adaptation and risk reduction strategies; hence, more research and cooperation
mechanism is needed in this area.
Recall from Section 3.3 earlier that the proposed 2021 budget for the normalization program
of the OPAPP has been slashed drastically. In the ongoing budget deliberations at the time of
writing this CCA, it was claimed that the original 2021 proposal by the OPAPP was Php10
billion but the DBM approved only Php700 million in the proposed National Expenditure
Program which was eventually submitted to Congress and made part of the General
Appropriations Bill. For the normalization process alone, it was claimed that the OPAPP will
be needing an additional Php3.2 billion for 2021.85
It is clear from recent developments the high likelihood that the normalization program will
have resource constraints in 2021 and development partners like the UN may have to come in
with complementary support. The packages related to decommissioning of former combatants
will be primarily implemented by government agencies as committed. The component wherein
development partners may be able to help is in the socioeconomic transformation of former
MILF camps, which is proceeding slowly. A possible vehicle of support is the upcoming
Bangsamoro Normalization Trust Fund. In this, the UN will be among the supporting
development partners as the World Bank will likely take the lead given the announcement by
the DOF that the World Bank will be the fund administrator. However, that UN support can be
catalytic if devoted to the groups which are left furthest behind.
85
CNN Philippines. 2020. Lacson: Bangsamoro ‘normalization’ projects must be funded regularly. CNN. 22 September 2020.
https://cnnphilippines.com/news/2020/9/22/OPAPP-budget-Bangsamoro.html?fbclid=IwAR1GHPcbBz8PFdd5EfAJn69W8Dk-
HT8lSqYevfdi-L-ms6HGcQDWesl7Y2w.
137
Addressing education inequality
Education divide can be addressed by ensuring that those who are most vulnerable such as
learners in remote areas and in indigenous communities are not left behind. If regular learners
are already having difficulties adapting to the digital and blended learning mode in the time of
the pandemic, learners in remote areas and in indigenous cultural communities expectedly have
greater difficulties. Even if donations of gadgets can be made, mobile phone signals are not
present in most communities and sometimes radio broadcast signals are also hard to receive.
Support in this aspect is something that the UN, possibly through the UNICEF, may be able to
provide well.
Moreover, in delivering support to indigenous peoples (IPs), the intervention must be sensitive
to the particular needs of IPs. IP group-specific education materials have to be developed
because of ethnolinguistic differences across IP groups. Environment-relevant content is also
important because of the IP’s closeness to nature. Developing content is not an easy task and
partnerships with academics, linguists and culture experts will therefore have to be forged.
In the learning modules that DepEd developed for use during the pandemic, parents, guardians
or siblings are expected to guide the learners at home. However, in poor and remote
communities, the level of literacy among adults tends to be low. Thus, in designing and re-
designing learning modules for the learners, a tremendous amount of flexibility and guidance
for self-learning is needed. The government is also confronted with the perennial problem of
shortage of licensed IP teachers. Therefore, the interventions should focus not only on learners
but teachers as well.
Non-education services such as safe water and improved sanitation also have to be included
when delivering education services interventions. This will help prevent children learners from
getting infected with the virus and more especially the elderly. In the case of the indigenous
population, it would be devastating for them to lose their elders because they are culture bearers
and repositories of knowledge.
138
Another indicator that must be explained well to the public and monitored regularly is the
positivity rate, or the proportion of COVID-positives among the population tested. The concept
is also being adopted and reported by government agencies during meetings, but it is not
adequately emphasized in regular public briefings by the government’s communications
officials. This is very important for assessing the timing and pace of opening up the economy
given that the WHO guidance in May 2020 is that if the positivity rate is less than 5% for two
weeks of testing a size of 1,000 individuals per suspect case, then mobility restrictions can be
eased. Positivity rate is supposed to be valid only when comprehensive surveillance and testing
of suspect cases is being done and the WHO recommended that this be 1/1000 population per
week. Given that the 2020 estimated population of the Philippines is 109.9 million, this
translates to a target of testing 109,900 individuals per week. The Philippines has been meeting
this target given its average daily test output of more than 28,000 individuals per day or a
weekly test output of more than around 196,000 individuals per week as of December 9, 2020.
However, the positivity rate remains high at 5.8 percent as of December 9, 2020.87
Health strategy indicators must be understood well by the public to help boost confidence in
the effectiveness of strategies to fight the pandemic. In addition, good content management in
some programs such as in the digital education and blended learning delivery mode by the
DepEd, which are currently facing criticisms due to errors in the contents of the learning
modules, can build trust and engender public cooperation. Given that the UN in the Philippines
has comparative advantage in assessments and data management, support from appropriate UN
agencies in this area can bring much value added.
Another cross-cutting potential value addition is support to governance mechanisms and for
this, it is important to understand how the government organization for COVID-19 response
has evolved. Figure 19 presents the current organizational chart for COVID-19 response in the
Philippines. Complementing government efforts will be more effective if development partners
including the UN will assess where in the governance structure the development partners are
already helping, where support is lacking, and where the UN entities can maximize their
responses. Moreover, an anticipatory governance approach, a model of decision-making under
a highly uncertain world that employs foresight, integration, and flexibility, must be supported.
This involves broad-based capacities and entails maximizing the utilization of expertise coming
from scientists, engineers, economists, and other professions.
87
Beat COVID-19 Today: A COVID-19 Philippine Situationer. Issue 227|December 10, 2020.
139
Figure 19. Philippine government organizational structure in the COVID response
140
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145
Annex A. Philippine Baseline for the SDGs and SDG Watch Updates
Target By 2030, eradicate extreme poverty for all people everywhere, currently measured as people
1.1 living on less than $1.25 a day
Proportion of population below the
6.0 6.0 World Development
international poverty line, by sex, age,
1.1.1 Indicators Database,
employment status and geographical 2015 2015
World Bank
location (urban/rural)
Proportion of employed population aged
15 years old and over living below the 6.0 6.0 ILO, UNSD SDG Global
1.1.1.1
international poverty line of US$1.90 per 2015 2015 Database
day
5.0 5.0 ILO, UNSD SDG Global
Female employed population
2015 2015 Database
6.6 6.6 ILO, UNSD SDG Global
Male employed population
2015 2015 Database
Proportion of employed population aged
15 to 24 years old living below the 7.6 7.6 ILO, UNSD SDG Global
1.1.1.2
international poverty line of US$1.90 per 2015 2015 Database
day
5.3 5.3 ILO, UNSD SDG Global
Female employed population
2015 2015 Database
8.9 8.9 ILO, UNSD SDG Global
Male employed population
2015 2015 Database
Proportion of employed population aged
25 years old and over living below the 5.6 5.6 ILO, UNSD SDG Global
1.1.1.3
international poverty line of US$1.90 per 2015 2015 Database
day
4.9 4.9 ILO, UNSD SDG Global
Female employed population
2015 2015 Database
6.0 6.0 ILO, UNSD SDG Global
Male employed population
2015 2015 Database
Target By 2030, reduce at least by half the proportion of men, women and children of all ages living in
1.2 poverty in all its dimensions according to national definitions
88
The basic updates, as officially reported by various government agencies to the Philippine Statistics Authority (the government
agency tasked to coordinate with all agencies in monitoring and reporting the progress in SDGs), are augmented in some cases
with updates gathered by the PIDS study team.
146
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
33.5 23.9 Poverty among Basic
Children
2015 2018 Sectors, PSA
20.5 14.7 Poverty among Basic
Youth
2015 2018 Sectors, PSA
14.4 9.1 Poverty among Basic
Senior Citizen
2015 2018 Sectors, PSA
Proportion of population living below the
1.2.1.3 national poverty line, by employment
status
19.3 12.2 Poverty among Basic
Employed population
2015 2018 Sectors, PSA
17.5 12.0 Poverty among Basic
Unemployed population
2015 2018 Sectors, PSA
Proportion of population living below the
1.2.1.4 national poverty line, by geographical
location
13.2 9.3 Poverty among Basic
Population residing in urban areas
2015 2018 Sectors, PSA
34.0 24.5 Poverty among Basic
Population residing in rural areas
2015 2018 Sectors, PSA
By 2030, ensure that all men and women, in particular the poor and the vulnerable, have equal
Target rights to economic resources, as well as access to basic services, ownership and control over land
1.4 and other forms of property, inheritance, natural resources, appropriate new technology and
financial services, including microfinance
Percentage of women ages 15-49 with a
live birth in the five years preceding the
survey who received antenatal care,
1.4.1p1
delivery assistance, or postnatal care
from health personnel for the most
recent birth
Percentage of women ages 15-49 who
received antenatal care from skilled 93.8 93.8
1.4.1p1.1 NDHS, PSA
health personnel for the most recent 2017 2017
birth
Percentage of women ages 15-49 with a 84.4 84.4
1.4.1p1.2 live birth delivery who were assisted by NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
skilled health personnel
Percentage of women ages 15-49 with a 86.1 86.1
1.4.1p1.3 postnatal check-up in the first two days NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
after birth
Percentage of all women and currently
1.4.1p2 married women ages 15-49 who have
ever used any contraceptive methods
51.6 49.1
All women NDHS, PSA
2008 2013
76.7 74.7
Currently married women NDHS, PSA
2008 2013
Percentage of population that visited a
health facility or sought advice or 7.6 7.6
1.4.1p3 NDHS, PSA
treatment in the 30 days preceding the 2017 2017
survey
66.0 76.5
1.4.1p4 Net enrolment rate in kindergarten EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
96.2 94.1
1.4.1p5 Net enrolment rate in elementary EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
Net enrolment rate in secondary
1.4.1p6
education
147
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
74.2 81.4
Junior High School EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
37.4 51.2
Senior High School EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
Proportion of families with access to 83.2 86.4
1.4.1p7 APIS, PSA
improved water supply 2016 2017
Proportion of population living in 91.9 89.2
1.4.1p8 households with access to sanitary APIS, PSA
2016 2017
facility
Proportion of families with owned or 61.0 59.6
1.4.1p9 APIS, PSA
owner-like possession of housing units 2016 2017
Proportion of families with access to 97.0 95.0
1.4.2p1 APIS, PSA
secure tenure 2016 2017
By 2030, build the resilience of the poor and those in vulnerable situations and reduce their
Target
exposure and vulnerability to climate-related extreme events and other economic, social and
1.5
environmental shocks and disasters
Number of deaths, missing persons and
1.5.1 directly affected persons attributed to
disasters per 100,000 population
Number of deaths attributed to 0.08 0.24
1.5.1.1 NDRRMC, OCD
disasters per 100,000 population 2016 2018
Number of missing persons attributed 0.03 0.00
1.5.1.2 NDRRMC, OCD
to disasters per 100,000 population 2016 2018
Number of directly affected persons 8,853 5,218
1.5.1.3 attributed to disasters per 100,000 NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
population
Number of countries that adopt and Sendai Framework for
implement national disaster risk 1 1 Disaster Risk
1.5.3 reduction strategies in line with the Reduction official
2016 2019
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk reports/ documents,
Reduction 2015-2030 NDRRMC
Proportion of local governments that
adopt and implement local disaster risk
1.5.4 reduction strategies in line with
national disaster risk reduction
strategies
52.9 76.5
National Capital Region NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
94.0 97.5
Cordillera Autonomous Region NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
44.8 100.0
Region I NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 100.0
Region II NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
59.0 99.3
Region III NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
99.8 100.0
Region IV-A NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
82.0 100.0
Region IV-B NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
91.0 93.3
Region V NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
25.1 20.2
Region VI NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
148
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
100.0 87.5
Region VII NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 59.5
Region VIII NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 45.3
Region IX NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 85.7
Region X NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 100.0
Region XI NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 100.0
Region XII NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
74.4 76.9
Caraga NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
12.5 53.7
ARMM NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
Ensure significant mobilization of resources from a variety of sources, including through
Target enhanced development cooperation, in order to provide adequate and predictable means for
1.a developing countries, in particular least developed countries, to implement programmes and
policies to end poverty in all its dimensions
Proportion of national budget for direct 2.9 3.1 People's Budget 2017,
1.a.1p1 poverty reduction program to the
2016 2019 DBM; DSWD
national budget 89
Target By 2030, end hunger and ensure access by all people, in particular the poor and people in
2.1 vulnerable situations, including infants, to safe, nutritious and sufficient food all year round
Updating of Nutritional
31.7 31.0 Status of Filipino
Proportion of households meeting
2.1.1p1 Children and Other
100% recommended energy intake 2013 2015
Population Groups,
PDRI, FNRI-DOST
By 2030, end all forms of malnutrition, including achieving, by 2025, the internationally agreed
Target
targets on stunting and wasting in children under 5 years of age, and address the nutritional
2.2
needs of adolescent girls, pregnant and lactating women and older persons
Prevalence of stunting (height for age <- Updating of Nutritional
2 standard deviation from the median 33.4 30.3 Status of Filipino
2.2.1 of the World Health Organization Children and Other
2015 2018
(WHO) Child Growth Standards) among Population Groups,
children under 5 years of age FNRI-DOST
89
The budget is limited to Conditional Cash Transfer; and, refers to budget only and not on expenditure.
149
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Prevalence of malnutrition (weight for
height >+2 or <-2 standard deviation
from the median of the WHO Child
2.2.2
Growth Standards) among children
under 5 years of age, by type (wasting
and overweight)
Updating of Nutritional
Prevalence of malnutrition for children 7.1 5.6 Status of Filipino
2.2.2.1 under 5 years <-2 SD from the median Children and Other
2015 2018
of the WHO CGS (wasting) Population Groups,
FNRI-DOST
Updating of Nutritional
Prevalence of malnutrition for children 3.9 4.0 Status of Filipino
2.2.2.2 under 5 years <+2 SD from the median Children and Other
2015 2018
of the WHO CGS (overweight) Population Groups,
FNRI-DOST
Prevalence of micronutrient
2.2.s1
deficiencies (Vit A, Iron)
2.2.s1.1 Vitamin A deficient
20.4 20.4 National Nutrition
6 months to 5 years old
2013 2013 Survey, FNRI-DOST
9.0 9.0 National Nutrition
Pregnant
2013 2013 Survey, FNRI-DOST
5.0 5.0 National Nutrition
Lactating
2013 2013 Survey, FNRI-DOST
3.0 3.0 National Nutrition
60 years old and up
2013 2013 Survey, FNRI-DOST
2.2.s1.2 Anemia
13.8 14.3 National Nutrition
6 months to 5 years old
2013 2018 Survey, FNRI-DOST
24.6 26.1 National Nutrition
Pregnant
2013 2018 Survey, FNRI-DOST
16.7 14.4 National Nutrition
Lactating
2013 2018 Survey, FNRI-DOST
20.8 20.2 National Nutrition
60 years old and up
2013 2018 Survey, FNRI-DOST
Prevalence of exclusively breastfed 48.8 54.9 National Nutrition
2.2.s2
children 0 to 5 months old 2015 2018 Survey, FNRI-DOST
GOAL 3. ENSURE HEALTHY LIVES AND PROMOTE WELLBEING FOR ALL AT ALL
AGES
Target
By 2030, reduce the global maternal mortality ratio to less than 70 per 100,000 live births
3.1
150
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Neonatal mortality rate (per 1,000 live 14.0 14.0
3.2.2 NDHS, PSA
births) 2017 2017
Infant mortality rate (per 1,000 live 21.0 21.0
3.2.s1 NDHS, PSA
births) 2017 2017
Target By 2030, end the epidemics of AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and neglected tropical diseases and
3.3 combat hepatitis, water-borne diseases and other communicable diseases
Target By 2030, reduce by one third premature mortality from non-communicable diseases through
3.4 prevention and treatment and promote mental health and well-being
Mortality rate attributed to 4.6 4.5 Vital Statistics Report,
3.4.1 cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes
2016 2018 PSA
or chronic respiratory disease
Mortality rate attributed to 2.7 2.7 Vital Statistics Report,
3.4.1.1
cardiovascular disease 2016 2018 PSA
1.1 1.0 Vital Statistics Report,
3.4.1.2 Mortality rate attributed to cancer
2016 2018 PSA
0.6 0.5 Vital Statistics Report,
3.4.1.3 Mortality rate attributed to diabetes
2016 2018 PSA
Mortality rate attributed to chronic 0.3 0.3 Vital Statistics Report,
3.4.1.4
respiratory disease 2016 2018 PSA
Target Strengthen the prevention and treatment of substance abuse, including narcotic drug abuse and
3.5 harmful use of alcohol
151
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Number of people covered by health 909 980
3.8.2 insurance or a public health system per Admin Data, PhilHealth
2016 2018
1,000 population
Percentage of population covered by 91.0 98.0
3.8.s1 Admin Data, PhilHealth
the social health insurance90 2016 2018
Out-of-pocket health spending as 52.0 51.7 Philippine National
3.8.s2
percentage of total health expenditure 2016 2018 Health Accounts, PSA
Target By 2030, substantially reduce the number of deaths and illnesses from hazardous chemicals and
3.9 air, water and soil pollution and contamination
Target Strengthen the implementation of the World Health Organization Framework Convention on
3.a Tobacco Control in all countries, as appropriate
Age-standardized prevalence of current 23.8 23.8 Global Adult Tobacco
3.a.1 tobacco use among persons aged 15
2015 2015 Survey
years and older
3.a.s1 Prevalence of current tobacco use
Prevalence of current tobacco use of 5.5 4.0 Updating of Nutritional
10-19.9 years old 2015 2018 Status of Filipino
Children and Other
Prevalence of current tobacco use of 20 23.3 20.7
Population Groups, NNS,
years old and over 2015 2018 FNRI-DOST
Support the research and development of vaccines and medicines for the communicable and non-
communicable diseases that primarily affect developing countries, provide access to affordable
Target essential medicines and vaccines, in accordance with the Doha Declaration on the TRIPS
3.b Agreement and Public Health, which affirms the right of developing countries to use to the full the
provisions in the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights regarding
flexibilities to protect public health, and, in particular, provide access to medicines for all
48.4 48.4
3.b.1p1 Proportion of fully immunized children NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
Percentage of public health facilities 65.4 55.0 Drug Availability
3.b.3p1 properly stocked with selected essential
2016 2019 Survey, DOH
medicines
GOAL 4. ENSURE INCLUSIVE AND QUALITY EDUCATION FOR ALL AND PROMOTE
LIFELONG LEARNING
Target By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys complete free, equitable and quality primary and
4.1 secondary education leading to relevant and effective learning outcomes
Proportion of children and young
people: (a) in grades 2/3; (b) at the end
of primary; and (c) at the end of lower
4.1.1
secondary achieving at least a minimum
proficiency level in (i) reading and (ii)
mathematics, by sex
Proportion of children in grades 2/3
achieving at least a minimum
4.1.1.1
proficiency level in (i) reading and (ii)
mathematics, by sex
Reading, both sexes .. ..
37.1 23.2
Mathematics, both sexes NAT, DepEd
2016 2017
90
Data includes the number indigents from the DSWD Listahanan Database.
152
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Proportion of children at the end of
primary achieving at least a minimum
4.1.1.2
proficiency level in (i) reading and (ii)
mathematics, by sex
40.4 40.4
Reading, both sexes NAT, DepEd
2016 2016
34.8 34.8
Mathematics, both sexes NAT, DepEd
2016 2016
Proportion of children at the end of
lower secondary achieving at least a
4.1.1.3
minimum proficiency level in (i)
reading and (ii) mathematics, by sex
46.0 46.0
Reading, both sexes NAT, DepEd
2016 2016
37.3 37.3
Mathematics, both sexes NAT, DepEd
2016 2016
4.1.s1 Completion rate
93.1 97.2
4.1.s1.1 Elementary EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
95.5 99.1
Female EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
90.8 95.3
Male EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
80.9 88.4
4.1.s1.2 Secondary (Junior High School) EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
85.6 93.0
Female EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
80.9 84.7
Male EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
4.1.s2 Cohort survival rate
93.8 97.4
4.1.s2.1 Elementary EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
96.0 99.1
Female EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
91.8 95.7
Male EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
83.1 89.5
4.1.s2.2 Secondary (Junior High School) EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
87.4 93.6
Female EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
78.7 85.4
Male EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
4.1.s3 Dropout rate or school leavers rate
1.5 0.5
4.1.s3.1 Elementary EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
1.0 0.1
Female EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
2.0 0.8
Male EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
6.2 3.4
4.1.s3.2 Secondary (Junior High School) EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
153
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
4.4 2.2
Female EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
7.9 5.3
Male EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
Target By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys have access to quality early childhood development, care
4.2 and pre-primary education so that they are ready for primary education
Participation rate in organized learning 66.0 76.5
4.2.2 (one year before the official primary EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
entry age)
66.4 76.5
Girls EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
65.5 76.4
Boys EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
Target By 2030, ensure equal access for all women and men to affordable and quality technical,
4.3 vocational and tertiary education, including university
Participation rate of youth and adults in
formal and non-formal education and
4.3.1 .. .. ..
training in the previous 12 months, by
sex
96.2 94.1
4.3.s1 Net enrolment rate in elementary EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
96.1 93.9
Female EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
96.2 94.3
Male EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
Net enrolment rate in secondary
4.3.s2
education
74.2 81.4
Junior High School EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
79.9 85.8
Female EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2918
68.8 77.2
Male EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
37.4 51.2
Senior High School EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
44.1 58.7
Female EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
31.0 44.2
Male EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
37.6 37.9
4.3.s3 Passing rate in licensure exam (HEd) PRC data, CHED
2016 2018
91.9 94.3
4.3.s4 Certification rate (TVET) Admin Data, TESDA
2016 2019
Target By 2030, substantially increase the number of youth and adults who have relevant skills,
4.4 including technical and vocational skills, for employment, decent jobs and entrepreneurship
Proportion of population with exposure
4.4.1p1
to internet
Proportion of population with exposure 43.9 43.9
4.4.1p1.1 FLEMMS, PSA
to social interaction in the internet 2013 2013
Proportion of population with exposure 42.2 42.2
4.4.1p1.2 FLEMMS, PSA
to research work/study in the internet 2013 2013
154
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
By 2030, eliminate gender disparities in education and ensure equal access to all levels of
Target
education and vocational training for the vulnerable, including persons with disabilities,
4.5
indigenous peoples and children in vulnerable situations
Parity indices (female/male,
rural/urban, bottom/top wealth
quintile and others such as disability
4.5.1 status, indigenous peoples and conflict-
affected, as data become available) for
all education indicators on this list that
can be disaggregated
Ratio of girls to boys in primary 0.92 0.90
EBEIS, DepEd
education 2016 2018
Ratio of girls to boys in secondary 1.01 1.00
EBEIS, DepEd
education 2016 2018
Ratio of girls to boys in tertiary 1.2 1.2
CHECKS, CHED
education 2016 2018
Target By 2030, ensure that all youth and a substantial proportion of adults, both men and women,
4.6 achieve literacy and numeracy
Percentage of population in a given age
group achieving at least a fixed level of
4.6.1
proficiency in functional (a) literacy and
(b) numeracy skills, by sex
Percentage of population in a given age 90.3 90.3
4.6.1.1 group achieving at least a fixed level of FLEMMS, PSA
2013 2013
proficiency in functional literacy
92.0 92.0
Female population FLEMMS, PSA
2013 2013
88.7 88.7
Male population FLEMMS, PSA
2013 2013
Percentage of population in a given age 96.5 96.5
4.6.1.2 group achieving at least a fixed level of FLEMMS, PSA
2013 2013
proficiency in basic literacy skills
96.1 96.1
Female population FLEMMS, PSA
2013 2013
97.0 97.0
Male population FLEMMS, PSA
2013 2013
Target By 2030, Build and upgrade education facilities that are child, disability and gender sensitive and
4.a provide safe, non-violent, inclusive and effective learning environments for all
Proportion of schools with access to: (a)
electricity; (b) the Internet for
pedagogical purposes; (c) computers for
pedagogical purposes; (d) adapted
infrastructure and materials for
4.a.1
students with disabilities; (e) basic
drinking water; (f) single-sex basic
sanitation facilities; and (g) basic
handwashing facilities (as per the
WASH indicator definitions)
Proportion of schools with access to
4.a.1.1
electricity
88.7 94.9
Elementary schools EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
Secondary schools 93.1 96.1
EBEIS, DepEd
(Junior High School) 2016 2018
Secondary schools 88.9 92.1
EBEIS, DepEd
(Senior High School) 2017 2018
155
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Proportion of schools with access to the
4.a.1.2
Internet for pedagogical purposes
25.6 28.6
Elementary schools EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
Secondary schools 34.0 40.8
EBEIS, DepEd
(Junior High School) 2017 2018
Secondary schools 31.0 70.5
EBEIS, DepEd
(Senior High School) 2017 2018
Proportion of schools with access to
4.a.1.3
computers for pedagogical purposes
78.5 77.9
Elementary schools EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
Secondary schools 83.1 81.1
EBEIS, DepEd
(Junior High School) 2016 2018
Secondary schools 23.6 60.4
EBEIS, DepEd
(Senior High School) 2016 2018
Proportion of schools with access to
4.a.1.4
single-sex basic sanitation facilities
45.1 45.1
Elementary schools EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2016
77.1 77.1
Secondary schools EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2016
Proportion of schools with access to
4.a.1.5 basic handwashing facilities (as per the
WASH indicator definitions)
61.0 77.1
Elementary schools EBEIS, DepEd
2016 2018
Secondary schools 74.0
EBEIS, DepEd
(Junior High School) 60.5 2018
Secondary schools 2016 65.3
EBEIS, DepEd
(Senior High School) 2018
By 2030, substantially increase the supply of qualified teachers, including through international
Target
cooperation for teacher training in developing countries, especially least developed countries and
4.c
small island developing States
4.c.s1 Faculty qualification (HEd)
Faculty qualification with MS/MA 40.4 37.6
4.c.s1.1 Admin data, CHED
degree/s 2016 2018
Faculty qualification with Ph.D. 13.3 16.6
4.c.s1.2 Admin data, CHED
degree/s 2016 2018
6,518 10,855
4.c.s2 Number of TVET trainers trained Admin data, TESDA
2018 2019
GOAL 5. ACHIEVE GENDER EQUALITY AND EMPOWER ALL WOMEN AND GIRLS
Target
End all forms of discrimination against all women and girls everywhere
5.1
156
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Whether or not legal frameworks are in
place to promote, enforce and monitor 1 1 Administrative Data,
5.1.1
equality and non‑discrimination on the 2016 2019 PCW
basis of sex91
Target Eliminate all forms of violence against all women and girls in the public and private spheres,
5.2 including trafficking and sexual and other types of exploitation
Proportion of ever-partnered women
and girls aged 15 years and older
subjected to physical, sexual, or 14.7 14.7
5.2.1 NDHS, PSA
psychological violence by a current or 2017 2017
former intimate partner in the previous
12 months
Proportion of ever-partnered women
and girls aged 15 years and older 4.3 4.3
5.2.1.1 subjected to physical violence by a NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
current or former intimate partner in
the previous 12 months
Proportion of ever-partnered women
and girls aged 15 years and older 2.2 2.2
5.2.1.2 subjected to sexual violence by a NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
current or former intimate partner in
the previous 12 months
Proportion of ever-partnered women
and girls aged 15 years and older 12.9 12.9
5.2.1.3 subjected to psychological violence by a NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
current or former intimate partner in
the previous 12 months
Proportion of ever-partnered women
and girls aged 15 years and older 5.5 5.5
5.2.1.4 subjected to physical or sexual violence NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
by a current or former intimate partner
in the previous 12 months
Proportion of women and girls aged 15
years and older subjected to sexual 0.1 0.1
5.2.2 violence by persons other than an NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
intimate partner in the previous 12
months, by age and place of occurrence
Number of reported gender-based 60,755 39,675 Administrative Data,
5.2.s1
violence cases (includes e-VAW) 2016 2018 PNP
Number of reported abuse cases for
5.2.s2
women and children
Number of reported abuse cases for 32,552 19,619 Administrative Data,
5.2.s2.1
women 2016 2018 PNP
Number of reported abuse cases for 29,349 21,751 Administrative Data,
5.2.s2.2
children 2016 2018 PNP
Number of cases served by Department
of Social Welfare and Development
5.2.s3
(DSWD) on violence against women and
child abuse
1,046 772 Administrative Data,
5.2.s3.1 Violence against women
2016 2018 DSWD
3,857 4,087 Administrative Data,
5.2.s3.2 Violence against children
2016 2018 DSWD
Target Eliminate all harmful practices, such as child, early and forced marriage and female genital
5.3 mutilation
91
In terms of legal frameworks, the Philippines has the following relevant legislations: Republic Act 7192. Women in Development
& National Building Act; Executive Order No. 273. Approving and Adopting the Philippine Plan for Gender-Responsive
Development, 1995-2025; Republic Act 9710. An Act Providing for the Magna Carta of Women
157
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Proportion of women aged 20-24 years
5.3.1 who were married or in a union before
age 15 and before age 18
2.2 2.2
Married or in a union before age 15 NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
16.5 16.5
Married or in a union before age 18 NDHS, PSA
2017 2017
Target Ensure women’s full and effective participation and equal opportunities for leadership at all
5.5 levels of decision-making in political, economic and public life
Proportion of seats held by women in
5.5.1 (a) national parliaments and (b) local
governments
Proportion of seats held by women in 28.7 28.7
5.5.1.1 ERSD, COMELEC
national parliaments92 2016 2019
Proportion of seats held by women in 31.0 29.1
5.5.1.2 ERSD, COMELEC
local governments 2016 2019
19.7 22.9
Provincial93 ERSD, COMELEC
2016 2019
78.8 23.2
City94 ERSD, COMELEC
2016 2019
22.4 22.8
Municipal95 ERSD, COMELEC
2016 2019
29.3 29.3
Barangay96 ERSD, COMELEC
2018 2018
Proportion of women in managerial 46.6 50.5
5.5.2 LFS, PSA
positions 2016 2019
Percentage of firms owned by women
5.5.s1 (through business permits and licenses .. .. ..
system)
Ensure universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights as agreed in
Target accordance with the Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and
5.6 Development and the Beijing Platform of Action and the outcome documents of their review
conferences
Number of countries with laws and
regulations that guarantee full and
equal access to women and men aged 15
5.6.2
years and older to sexual and
reproductive health care, information
and education97
Number of countries with laws and
regulations that guarantee full and
equal access to women and men aged 0 0 Administrative Data,
5.6.2.1
15 to less than 18 years to sexual and 2016 2019 DOH
reproductive health care, information
and education
92
The national parliament is composed of the members of the Senate and the Congress as of 30 October 2019.
93
This includes vice governor and provincial member as of 30 October 2019.
94
This includes the city vice mayor and city councilors as of 30 October 2019.
95
This includes the municipal vice mayor and municipal councilors as of 30 October 2019.
96
This includes the barangay chairman, barangay kagawad, SK chairman as of September 2018.
97
In terms of legal frameworks, the Philippines has the following relevant legislations: Per RA 10354 known as the Responsible
Parenthood and Reproductive Health (RPRH) Law, enacted on December 2012, the law does not provide for minors’ full access
to sexual and reproductive health care services without parent’s consent because of the Family Code.
158
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Number of countries with laws and
regulations that guarantee full and
equal access to women and men aged 1 1 Administrative Data,
5.6.2.2
18 years and older to sexual and 2016 2019 DOH
reproductive health care, information
and education
Undertake reforms to give women equal rights to economic resources, as well as access to
Target
ownership and control over land and other forms of property, financial services, inheritance and
5.a
natural resources, in accordance with national laws
Number agricultural and residential 70,255 70,901 Administrative Data,
5.a.1p1 land free patents issued to women and
2016 2017 DENR
men
Number agricultural and residential 32,646 33,709 Administrative Data,
5.a.1p1.1
land free patents issued to women 2016 2017 DENR
Number agricultural and residential 37,609 37,192 Administrative Data,
5.a.1p1.2
land free patents issued to men 2016 2017 DENR
Number of holders of emancipation
patents and certificates of land
ownership, certificate of ancestral land
5.a.1p2
titles (CALTs), certificate of ancestral
domain titles (CADTs) by sex,
stewardship
Number of holders of Emancipation 409,528 500,229 Administrative Data,
Patents 2016 2018 DAR
Number of holders of Certificates of 1,903,799 1,920,475 Administrative Data,
Land Ownership 2016 2018 DAR
Number of women beneficiaries with 53,242 42,196 Administrative Data,
5.a.1p3 secured land tenure in Residential
2016 2017 DENR
areas
Target Adopt and strengthen sound policies and enforceable legislation for the promotion of gender
5.c equality and the empowerment of all women and girls at all levels
Proportion of countries with systems to
1 1 National GAD Budget
track and make public allocations for
5.c.1 Policy Implementation
gender equality and women’s 2016 2019
through GMMS, PCW
empowerment98
98
In terms of legal frameworks, the Philippines has the following relevant legislations: Republic Act 7192. Women in Development
& Nation Building Act; Republic Act 9710. An Act Providing for the Magna Carta of Women; General Appropriations Act; Joint
Circular 2012-01. Guidelines for the Preparation of Annual Gender and Development (GAD) Plans and Budgets and
Accomplishment Reports to Implement the Magna Carta of Women; PCW-DILG-DBM-NEDA Joint Memorandum Circular No.
2016-01. Amendment to PCW-DILG-DBM-NEDA JMC 2013-01: Guidelines on the Localization of the Magna Carta of Women;
PCW-DILG-DBM-NEDA Joint Memorandum Circular 2013-01. Guidelines on the Localization of the Magna Carta of Women;
PCW-OPAPP Joint Memorandum Circular no. 2014-01. Integration of Women, Peace and Security Programs, Activities and
Projects (PAPs) in annual gender and Development (GAD) Plans and Budgets (GPBs) and Gender and Development
Accomplishments Reports (GADARs); Memorandum Circular No. 2015-04: Preparation and Online Submission of FY 2017
Gender and Development (GAD) Plans and Budgets and FY 2015 GAD Accomplishment Report and other Matters.
159
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
79.5 79.5 National Water Quality
6.3.2p1.2 Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) Status Report, EMB-
2016 2016
DENR
By 2030, substantially increase water-use efficiency across all sectors and ensure sustainable
Target
withdrawals and supply of freshwater to address water scarcity and substantially reduce the
6.4
number of people suffering from water scarcity
Level of water stress: freshwater
6.4.2 withdrawal as a proportion of available .. .. ..
freshwater resources
Target By 2030, implement integrated water resources management at all levels, including through
6.5 transboundary cooperation as appropriate
Percentage of implementation of
programs and projects identified in the 26.1 21.2 Admin data, RBCO-
6.5.1p1
Integrated River Basin Master Plans 2016 2019 DENR
(IRBMP)
Percentage of major river basins with 83.3 83.3
6.5.1p1.1 updated Integrated River Basin Master Admin data, RBCO-DENR
2016 2019
Plans (IRBMP)
Percentage of River Basins with 100.0 72.4
6.5.1p1.2 established River Basin Organizations Admin data, RBCO-DENR
2016 2019
(RBO)
By 2030, expand international cooperation and capacity-building support to developing countries
Target
in water- and sanitation-related activities and programmes, including water harvesting,
6.a
desalination, water efficiency, wastewater treatment, recycling and reuse technologies
Amount of water- and sanitation-
related official development assistance
6.a.1
that is part of a government-
coordinated spending plan
Amount of water- and sanitation-
related official development assistance $62 M $60 M
that is part of a government- ADB WDDSP, LWUA
2016 2019
coordinated spending plan particularly
in LWUA99
Amount of water- and sanitation-
related official development assistance
that is part of a government- .. .. MWSS
coordinated spending plan particularly
in MWSS
Target Support and strengthen the participation of local communities in improving water and sanitation
6.b management
Proportion of local administrative units
with established and operational
6.b.1 policies and procedures for .. .. ..
participation of local communities in
water and sanitation management
1,185 1,185 Program and Project
Number of functional WASH councils/
6.b.s1 Monitoring System,
committees in LGUs 2016 2016
DILG
Number of local WASH ordinances 12 20 Program and Project
6.b.s2 strengthening WASH governance in the Monitoring System,
2017 2018
communities DILG
Target
By 2030, ensure universal access to affordable, reliable and modern energy services
7.1
99
Loan and Grant Agreement signed April 2016; no disbursement yet except commitment charges.
160
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Proportion of population with access to 90.7 95.3
7.1.1 REAMD, EPIMB, DOE
electricity 2016 2018
Proportion of population with primary
7.1.2 .. .. ..
reliance on clean fuels and technology
Target
By 2030, increase substantially the share of renewable energy in the global energy mix
7.2
Renewable energy share in the total
7.2.1 .. .. ..
final energy consumption
Target
By 2030, double the global rate of improvement in energy efficiency
7.3
Energy intensity measured in terms of 6.7 6.4
7.3.1 EPPB, DOE
primary energy and GDP (TOE/MPhp) 2016 2018
Target Sustain per capita economic growth in accordance with national circumstances and, in particular,
8.1 at least 7 per cent gross domestic product growth per annum in the least developed countries
Annual growth rate of real GDP per 5.1 4.3
8.1.1 National Accounts, PSA
capita 2016 2019
Target Achieve higher levels of economic productivity through diversification, technological upgrading
8.2 and innovation, including through a focus on high-value added and labour-intensive sectors
Annual growth rate of real GDP per 10.6 2.7
8.2.1 National Accounts, PSA
employed person 2017 2019
Target By 2030, achieve full and productive employment and decent work for all women and men,
8.5 including for young people and persons with disabilities, and equal pay for work of equal value
5.4 5.1 Labor Force Survey,
8.5.2 Unemployment rate
2016 2019 PSA
5.2 5.2
Female Labor Force Survey, PSA
2016 2019
5.6 5.1
Male Labor Force Survey, PSA
2016 2019
Target
By 2020, substantially reduce the proportion of youth not in employment, education or training
8.6
Proportion of youth (aged 15-24 years) 11.5 18.6 Labor Force Survey,
8.6.1 not in education, employment or
2016 2019 PSA
training
Target Protect labour rights and promote safe and secure working environments for all workers,
8.8 including migrant workers, in particular women migrants, and those in precarious employment
Frequency rates of fatal and non-fatal
8.8.1
occupational injuries
0.03 0.04 Integrated Survey on
Frequency rates of fatal occupational
8.8.1.1 Labor and Employment,
injuries 2015 2017
PSA
1.9 1.7 Integrated Survey on
Frequency rates of non-fatal
8.8.1.2 Labor and Employment,
occupational injuries 2015 2017
PSA
Incidence rate of Occupational Injuries, 3.8 9.6 Integrated Survey on
8.8.1.3 Fatalities per 100,000 employed Labor and Employment,
2015 2017
persons PSA
Incidence rate of Occupational Injuries, 426.0 417.0 Integrated Survey on
8.8.1.4 Non-Fatalities per 100,000 employed Labor and Employment,
2015 2017
persons PSA
161
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Target By 2030, devise and implement policies to promote sustainable tourism that creates jobs and
8.9 promotes local culture and products
Tourism direct GVA as a proportion of
8.9.1p1
total GDP and in growth rate
10.7 12.7 Tourism Satellite
8.9.1p1.1 Share of Tourism GVA to GDP
2016 2018 Account, PSA
15.0 14.3 Tourism Satellite
8.9.1p1.2 Growth rate of Tourism GVA
2016 2018 Account, PSA
Proportion of employed in tourism out 12.8 13.0 Tourism Satellite
8.9.2p1
of total employed 2016 2018 Account, PSA
Target Strengthen the capacity of domestic financial institutions to encourage and expand access to
8.10 banking, insurance and financial services for all
(a) Number of commercial bank
branches per 100,000 adults and (b)
8.10.1
number of automated teller machines
(ATMs) per 100,000 adults100
15.5 16.4 Banking Statistics, BSP &
Number of commercial bank branches
8.10.1.1 Population Projections,
per 100,000 adults 2016 2018
PSA
26.6 28.4 Banking Statistics, BSP &
Number of automated teller machines
8.10.1.2 Population Projections,
(ATMs) per 100,000 adults 2016 2018
PSA
Proportion of adults (15 years and
older) with an account at a bank or 34.5 34.5
8.10.2 World Bank Findex
other financial institution or with a 2017 2017
mobile-money-service provider
100
This is computed as number of BSP supervised/regulated financial institutions (banks, including head office, branches, and
other offices and non-banks) per 100,000 adults.
162
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Manufacturing employment as a 8.3 8.5 Labor Force Survey,
9.2.2
proportion of total employment 2016 2019 PSA
Enhance scientific research, upgrade the technological capabilities of industrial sectors in all
Target countries, in particular developing countries, including, by 2030, encouraging innovation and
9.5 substantially increasing the number of research and development workers per 1 million people
and public and private research and development spending
National Accounts, PSA
Survey on Research
Research and development expenditure 0.17 0.07 and Development
9.5.1
as a proportion of GDP Q4 2015 2019 Expenditures and
Human Resources,
DOST
Facilitate sustainable and resilient infrastructure development in developing countries through
Target
enhanced financial, technological and technical support to African countries, least developed
9.a
countries, landlocked developing countries and small island developing States
Total official international support $430.6 M $533.15 M
9.a.1 (official development assistance plus ODA Portfolio, NEDA
2016 2018
other official flows) to infrastructure101
Target By 2030, progressively achieve and sustain income growth of the bottom 40 per cent of the
10.1 population at a rate higher than the national average
Growth rates of household income per
10.1.1 capita among the bottom 40 per cent of
the population and the total population
Among the bottom 40 percent of the 5.3 10.4
FIES, PSA
population 2015 2018
5.2 6.5
Among the total population FIES, PSA
2015 2018
Target By 2030, empower and promote the social, economic and political inclusion of all, irrespective of
10.2 age, sex, disability, race, ethnicity, origin, religion or economic or other status
Proportion of people living below 50 17.6 16.2
10.2.1 FIES, PSA
per cent of median income, by age 2015 2018
Target Adopt policies, especially fiscal, wage and social protection policies, and progressively achieve
10.4 greater equality
Consolidated Accounts
35.7 36.9 and Income and Outlay
Labour share of GDP, comprising wages
10.4.1 Accounts and National
and social protection transfers 2016 2018
Accounts of the
Philippines, PSA
Target Improve the regulation and monitoring of global financial markets and institutions and
10.5 strengthen the implementation of such regulations
10.5.1 Financial soundness indicators
10.5.1.1 Capital Adequacy
Regulatory capital to risk-weighted 16.1 15.9 Report on Philippine
assets (consolidated) 2016 Q2 2019 Financial System
Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio 14.2 14.5 Report on Philippine
(consolidated) 2016 Q2 2019 Financial System
9.9 9.9 Report on Philippine
Leverage ratio
Q2 2019 Q2 2019 Financial System
10.5.1.2 Asset Quality
101
Actual disbursements from ODA loans and grants during the reference year, channeled to infrastructure sector.
163
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
NPL coverage ratio (Allowance for 119.9 92.3 Banking Statistics - Asset
Credit Losses to NPL) 2016 Q4 2019 Quality Indicators -
80.5 70.1 Philippine Banking
NPA Coverage Ratio Systems, BSP
2016 Q4 2019
10.5.1.3 Profitability
1.1 1.3 Banking Statistics - Asset
Return on Assets
2016 Q4 2019 Quality Indicators -
10.5 10.5 Philippine Banking
Return on Equity Systems, BSP
2016 Q4 2019
10.5.1.4 Liquidity
Banking Statistics - Asset
Net stable funding ratio 126.8 126.8 Quality Indicators -
(consolidated) Q2 2019 Q2 2019 Philippine Banking
Systems, BSP
164.4 169.0
Liquidity Coverage Ratio BSP
Q1 2018 Q3 2019
Ensure enhanced representation and voice for developing countries in decision-making in global
Target
international economic and financial institutions in order to deliver more effective, credible,
10.6
accountable and legitimate institutions
Proportion of members and voting
10.6.1 rights of developing countries in
international organizations
Proportion of membership of
10.6.1.a developing countries in international
organizations
1 1 UN General Assembly
United Nations General Assembly Website, UNSD SDG
2016 2019
Global Database
0 0 Report of the Security
United Nations Security Council
2016 2019 Council, UNSD
United Nations Economic and Social 0 1 Report of the Economic
Council 2016 2019 Council, UNSD
1 1 IMF Annual Report,
International Monetary Fund
2016 2019 UNSD
1 1 IBRD's Discussion and
International Bank for
Analysis and Financial
Reconstruction and Development 2016 2019
Statements, UNSD
1 1
International Finance Corporation IFC Annual Report, UNSD
2016 2019
1 1 ADB Annual Report,
Asian Development Bank
2016 2019 UNSD
1 1 WTO Annual Report,
World Trade Organisation
2016 2019 UNSD
Proportion of voting rights of
10.6.1.b developing countries in international
organizations
1 1 UN General Assembly
United Nations General Assembly Website, UNSD SDG
2016 2019
Global Database
0 0 Report of the Security
United Nations Security Council
2016 2019 Council, UNSD
United Nations Economic and Social 0 1 Report of the Economic
Council 2016 2019 Council, UNSD
1 1 IMF Annual Report,
International Monetary Fund
2016 2019 UNSD
164
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
1 1 IBRD's Discussion and
International Bank for
Analysis and Financial
Reconstruction and Development 2016 2019
Statements, UNSD
1 1
International Finance Corporation IFC Annual Report, UNSD
2016 2019
1 1 ADB Annual Report,
Asian Development Bank
2016 2019 UNSD
1 1 WTO Annual Report,
World Trade Organisation
2016 2019 UNSD
Target Implement the principle of special and differential treatment for developing countries, in
10.a particular least developed countries, in accordance with World Trade Organization agreements
Proportion of tariff lines applied to
imports from least developed countries
10.a.1
and developing countries with zero-
tariff
Proportion of tariff lines applied to
imports from Cambodia under the 98.8 98.9 AHTN, Tariff
10.a.1.1
ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement 2016 2019 Commission
(ATIGA) with zero Tariff Lines
Proportion of tariff lines applied to
imports from Lao PDR under the 98.6 98.9 AHTN, Tariff
10.a.1.2
ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement 2016 2019 Commission
(ATIGA) with zero Tariff Lines
Proportion of tariff lines applied to
imports from Myanmar under the 98.7 98.9 AHTN, Tariff
10.a.1.3
ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement 2016 2019 Commission
(ATIGA) with zero Tariff Lines
Proportion of tariff lines applied to
imports from Malaysia under the 98.6 98.9 AHTN, Tariff
10.a.1.4
ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement 2016 2019 Commission
(ATIGA) with zero Tariff Lines
Proportion of tariff lines applied to
imports from Indonesia under the 98.8 98.8 AHTN, Tariff
10.a.1.5
ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement 2016 2019 Commission
(ATIGA) with zero Tariff Lines
Proportion of tariff lines applied to
imports from Vietnam under the ASEAN 98.6 98.8 AHTN, Tariff
10.a.1.6
Trade in Goods Agreement (ATIGA) 2016 2019 Commission
with zero Tariff Lines
Proportion of tariff lines applied to
imports from China under the ASEAN- 86.8 82.3 AHTN, Tariff
10.a.1.7
China Free Trade Area (ACFTA) with 2016 2019 Commission
zero Tariff Lines
Proportion of tariff lines applied to
imports from India under the ASEAN- 3.5 52.2 AHTN, Tariff
10.a.1.8
India Free Trade Area (ACFTA) with 2016 2019 Commission
zero Tariff Lines
Encourage official development assistance and financial flows, including foreign direct
Target investment, to States where the need is greatest, in particular least developed countries, African
10.b countries, small island developing States and landlocked developing countries, in accordance
with their national plans and programmes
Total resource flows for development,
by recipient and donor countries and
10.b.1 type of flow (e.g. official development
assistance, foreign direct investment
and other flows)
Total actual disbursements from ODA and $1,251.7 M $2,467.5 M ODA Portfolio Review,
other flows during the reference year 2016 2018 NEDA
Actual disbursements from ODA loans and $1,251.7 M $2,467.1 M ODA Portfolio Review,
grants during the reference year 2016 2018 NEDA
165
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
$8,279.5 M $6,412.8 M Balance of Payments
Foreign direct investment (FDI)102
2016 2019 (BOP) statistics, BSP
GOAL 11. MAKE CITIES AND HUMAN SETTLEMENTS INCLUSIVE, SAFE, RESILIENT
AND SUSTAINABLE
Target By 2030, ensure access for all to adequate, safe and affordable housing and basic services and
11.1 upgrade slums
Proportion of urban population who are 3.2 3.2 Census on Population,
11.1.1p1
informal settlers 2015 2015 PSA
By 2030, significantly reduce the number of deaths and the number of people affected and
Target substantially decrease the direct economic losses relative to global gross domestic product
11.5 caused by disasters, including water-related disasters, with a focus on protecting the poor and
people in vulnerable situations
Number of deaths, missing persons and
11.5.1 directly affected persons attributed to
disasters per 100,000 population
Number of deaths attributed to 0.08 0.24
11.5.1.1 NDRRMC, OCD
disasters per 100,000 population 2016 2018
Number of missing persons attributed 0.03 0.00
11.5.1.2 NDRRMC, OCD
to disasters per 100,000 population 2016 2018
Number of directly affected persons 8,853 5,218
11.5.1.3 attributed to disasters per 100,000 NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
population
Target By 2030, reduce the adverse per capita environmental impact of cities, including by paying
11.6 special attention to air quality and municipal and other waste management
Percentage of highly urbanized and
other major urban centers within 47.0 47.0 AQMS Database, EMB-
11.6.2p1
ambient air quality guidelines value 2015 2015 DENR
increased
By 2020, substantially increase the number of cities and human settlements adopting and
implementing integrated policies and plans towards inclusion, resource efficiency, mitigation and
Target
adaptation to climate change, resilience to disasters, and develop and implement, in line with the
11.b
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030, holistic disaster risk management at
all levels
Number of countries that adopt and Sendai Framework for
implement national disaster risk 1 1 Disaster Risk
11.b.1 reduction strategies in line with the Reduction official
2016 2019
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk reports/ documents,
Reduction 2015-2030 NDRRMC
Proportion of local governments that
adopt and implement local disaster risk
11.b.2 reduction strategies in line with
national disaster risk reduction
strategies
52.9 76.5
National Capital Region NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
94.0 97.5
Cordillera Autonomous Region NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
44.8 100.0
Region I NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 100.0
Region II NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
102
Foreign direct investment (FDI) for 2019 only covers January to November 2019.
166
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
59.0 99.3
Region III NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
99.8 100.0
Region IV-A NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
82.0 100.0
Region IV-B NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
91.0 93.3
Region V NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
25.1 20.2
Region VI NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 87.5
Region VII NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 59.5
Region VIII NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 45.3
Region IX NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 85.7
Region X NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 100.0
Region XI NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 100.0
Region XII NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
74.4 76.9
Caraga NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
12.5 53.7
ARMM NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
By 2020, achieve the environmentally sound management of chemicals and all wastes throughout
Target their life cycle, in accordance with agreed international frameworks, and significantly reduce
12.4 their release to air, water and soil in order to minimize their adverse impacts on human health
and the environment
Hazardous waste generated per capita
12.4.2 and proportion of hazardous waste
treated (industries)103
0.0145 0.0427 Administrative data,
Hazardous waste generated per capita
12.4.2.1 DENR-EMB; Population
by industries (in metric tons) 2016 2017
Projections, PSA
Proportion of hazardous waste treated 40.62 112.6 Administrative data,
12.4.2.2
by industries 2016 2017 DENR-EMB
GOAL 13. TAKE URGENT ACTION TO COMBAT CLIMATE CHANGE AND ITS
IMPACTS
Target Strengthen resilience and adaptive capacity to climate-related hazards and natural disasters in all
13.1 countries
Number of deaths, missing persons and
13.1.1 directly affected persons attributed to
disasters per 100,000 population
103
Limited to hazardous waste generated by industries.
167
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Number of deaths attributed to 0.08 0.24
13.1.1.1 NDRRMC, OCD
disasters per 100,000 population 2016 2018
Number of missing persons attributed 0.03 0.00
13.1.1.2 NDRRMC, OCD
to disasters per 100,000 population 2016 2018
Number of directly affected persons 8,853 5,218
13.1.1.3 attributed to disasters per 100,000 NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
population
Number of countries that adopt and Sendai Framework for
implement national disaster risk 1 1 Disaster Risk
13.1.2 reduction strategies in line with the Reduction official
2016 2019
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk reports/ documents,
Reduction 2015-2030 NDRRMC
Proportion of local governments that
adopt and implement local disaster risk
13.1.3 reduction strategies in line with
national disaster risk reduction
strategies
52.9 76.5
National Capital Region NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
94.0 97.5
Cordillera Autonomous Region NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
44.8 100.0
Region I NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 100.0
Region II NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
59.0 99.3
Region III NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
99.8 100.0
Region IV-A NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
82.0 100.0
Region IV-B NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
91.0 93.3
Region V NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
25.1 20.2
Region VI NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 87.5
Region VII NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 59.5
Region VIII NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 45.3
Region IX NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 85.7
Region X NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 100.0
Region XI NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
100.0 100.0
Region XII NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
74.4 76.9
Caraga NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
12.5 53.7
ARMM NDRRMC, OCD
2016 2018
168
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Target
Integrate climate change measures into national policies, strategies and planning
13.2
Number of countries that have
communicated the establishment or
operationalization of an integrated
policy/strategy/plan which increases
their ability to adapt to the adverse
impacts of climate change, and foster 1 1 CCC; DENR-EMB and
13.2.1 climate resilience and low greenhouse FMB and other related
2016 2019
gas emissions development in a manner agencies
that does not threaten food production
(including a national adaptation plan,
nationally determined contribution,
national communication, biennial
update report or other)104
GOAL 14. CONSERVE AND SUSTAINABLY USE THE OCEANS, SEAS AND MARINE
RESOURCES FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Target By 2020, conserve at least 10 per cent of coastal and marine areas, consistent with national and
14.5 international law and based on the best available scientific information
Coverage of protected areas in relation
14.5.1
to marine areas
220 M ha. 3.08 M ha. Statistics of Philippine
Coverage of protected areas in relation
14.5.1.1 Protected Areas and
to marine areas, (total)105 2016 2019
Wildlife Resources, EMB
Coverage of protected areas in relation 0.6470 1.4
14.5.1.2 to marine areas, NIPAS and Locally 5th NR to CBD, EMB
2016 2019
managed MPAs106
104
Executive Order 174 - Philippine Greenhouse Gas Inventory Management and Reporting System (PGHGIMRS)
105
These figures are currently being raised with the PSA and DENR-Environmental Management Bureau. A database referred
by the University of the Philippines-Marine Science Institute shows that the latest available figure is for the year 2018 -- a total of
3,861,255.50452 hectares. On the other hand, the 2016 figure is only 3,395,474.27452 hectares, way lower than the 220 million
hectares baseline from the PSA and DENR-Environmental Management Bureau. (Philippine MPA Database. (2020).
http://database.mpasupportnetwork.org/).
106
Proportion of NIPAS and locally managed MPAs to the total covered areas in relation to marine areas.
107
Limited only to forest land.
169
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Proportion of important sites with good
0.5445 0.5445 Terrestrial and
ecosystem for terrestrial and
15.1.2.3 freshwater biodiversity,
freshwater biodiversity that are 2019 2019
BMB
covered by protected areas
Proportion of important sites with
0.2591 0.2591 Terrestrial and
excellent ecosystem for terrestrial and
15.1.2.4 freshwater biodiversity,
freshwater biodiversity that are 2019 2019
BMB
covered by protected areas
By 2020, promote the implementation of sustainable management of all types of forests, halt
Target
deforestation, restore degraded forests and substantially increase afforestation and reforestation
15.2
globally
Progress towards sustainable forest
15.2.1
management
Forest areas with tenure or 2.6 M ha. 2.5 M ha. Administrative data,
management arrangements 2017 2018 DENR
Target By 2030, combat desertification, restore degraded land and soil, including land affected by
15.3 desertification, drought and floods, and strive to achieve a land degradation-neutral world
Forest Cover Change (from close to open 330,689 ha. 330,689 ha. Administrative data,
15.3.1p1
forest) 2015 2015 DENR
Target Take urgent and significant action to reduce the degradation of natural habitats, halt the loss of
15.5 biodiversity and, by 2020, protect and prevent the extinction of threatened species
15.5.1 Red List Index .. .. ..
Target Promote fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising from the utilization of genetic resources
15.6 and promote appropriate access to such resources, as internationally agreed
Number of countries that have adopted
legislative, administrative and policy
15.6.1 .. .. ..
frameworks to ensure fair and
equitable sharing of benefits
Target Take urgent action to end poaching and trafficking of protected species of flora and fauna and
15.7 address both demand and supply of illegal wildlife products
Proportion of traded wildlife that was
15.7.1 .. .. ..
poached or illicitly trafficked
Target By 2020, integrate ecosystem and biodiversity values into national and local planning,
15.9 development processes, poverty reduction strategies and accounts
Progress towards national targets
established in accordance with Aichi
15.9.1 .. .. ..
Biodiversity Target 2 of the Strategic
Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020
Target Mobilize and significantly increase financial resources from all sources to conserve and
15.a sustainably use biodiversity and ecosystems
Official development assistance and
public expenditure on conservation and $15.97 M $32.72 M ODA Portfolio Review,
15.a.1
sustainable use of biodiversity and 2016 2018 NEDA
ecosystems108
Mobilize significant resources from all sources and at all levels to finance sustainable forest
Target
management and provide adequate incentives to developing countries to advance such
15.b
management, including for conservation and reforestation
Official development assistance and
public expenditure on conservation and $15.97 M $32.72 M ODA Portfolio Review,
15.b.1
sustainable use of biodiversity and 2016 2018 NEDA
ecosystems
Enhance global support for efforts to combat poaching and trafficking of protected species,
Target
including by increasing the capacity of local communities to pursue sustainable livelihood
15.c
opportunities
108
Baseline data is the total amount of ODA for the Agriculture, Agrarian Reform and Natural Resources sector.
170
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Proportion of traded wildlife that was
15.c.1 .. .. ..
poached or illicitly trafficked
Target
Develop effective, accountable and transparent institutions at all levels
16.6
Primary government expenditures as a
16.6.1
proportion of original approved budget
98.4 99.4
Economic Services BESF, DBM
2016 2018
86.9 86.5
Social Services BESF, DBM
2016 2018
87.1 104.6
Defense BESF, DBM
2016 2018
91.6 96.0
General Public Services BESF, DBM
2016 2018
Target
Ensure responsive, inclusive, participatory and representative decision-making at all levels
16.7
171
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Proportion of positions (by sex, age,
persons with disabilities and
population groups) in public
16.7.1 institutions (national and local
legislatures, public service, and
judiciary) compared to national
distributions
National Government Agencies (NGAs)
and State Universities and Colleges
(SUCs)
73.7 73.7 Government Manpower
Female Information System
2018 2018
(GMIS) as of FY 2018
26.3 26.3 Government Manpower
Male Information System
2018 2018
(GMIS) as of FY 2018
Target Broaden and strengthen the participation of developing countries in the institutions of global
16.8 governance
Proportion of members and voting
16.8.1 rights of developing countries in
international organizations
Proportion of membership of
16.8.1.a developing countries in international
organizations
1 1 UN General Assembly
United Nations General Assembly Website, UNSD SDG
2016 2019
Global Database
0 0 Report of the Security
United Nations Security Council
2016 2019 Council, UNSD
United Nations Economic and Social 0 1 Report of the Economic
Council 2016 2019 Council, UNSD
1 1 IMF Annual Report,
International Monetary Fund
2016 2019 UNSD
1 1 IBRD's Discussion and
International Bank for
Analysis and Financial
Reconstruction and Development 2016 2019
Statements, UNSD
1 1
International Finance Corporation IFC Annual Report, UNSD
2016 2019
1 1 ADB Annual Report,
Asian Development Bank
2016 2019 UNSD
1 1 WTO Annual Report,
World Trade Organisation
2016 2019 UNSD
Proportion of voting rights of
16.8.1.b developing countries in international
organizations
1 1 UN General Assembly
United Nations General Assembly Website, UNSD SDG
2016 2019
Global Database
0 0 Report of the Security
United Nations Security Council
2016 2019 Council, UNSD
United Nations Economic and Social 0 1 Report of the Economic
Council 2016 2019 Council, UNSD
1 1 IMF Annual Report,
International Monetary Fund
2016 2019 UNSD
1 1 IBRD's Discussion and
International Bank for
Analysis and Financial
Reconstruction and Development 2016 2019
Statements, UNSD
172
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
1 1
International Finance Corporation IFC Annual Report, UNSD
2016 2019
1 1 ADB Annual Report,
Asian Development Bank
2016 2019 UNSD
1 1 WTO Annual Report,
World Trade Organisation
2016 2019 UNSD
Target
By 2030, provide legal identity for all, including birth registration
16.9
Vital Statistics Reports,
Proportion of children under 5 years of 77.2 76.2 PSA; 2010 Census-based
16.9.1 age whose births have been registered
2016 2017 Population Projections,
with a civil authority, by age109
PSA
Target Ensure public access to information, and protect fundamental freedoms, in accordance with
16.10 national legislation and international agreements
Number of countries that adopt and eFOI, Department of
implement constitutional, statutory 1 1 Information and
16.10.2
and/or policy guarantees for public 2016 2019 Communication
access to information110 Technology
Strengthen relevant national institutions, including through international cooperation, for
Target
building capacity at all levels, in particular in developing countries, for preventing violence and
16.a
combatting terrorism and crime
Existence of independent national 1 1 Commission on Human
16.a.1 human rights institutions in compliance
2016 2019 Rights
with the Paris Principles111
109
The number of registered live births does not include births that occurred in the reference year and were registered beyond
the cut-off for inclusion in the Vital Statistics Reports, that is, March of the following year. Further, the population used was 2010
Census-based population projections.
110
Executive Order No. 2 (EO 2) is the enabling order for FOI. EO 2 operationalizes in the Executive Branch the People’s
Constitutional right to information. EO 2 also provides the State policies to full public disclosure and transparency in the public
service. EO 2 is an important enabling mechanism to promote transparency in the government's administrative process. Through
FOI, citizens are empowered to make a formal request to get information held by the government, barring certain sensitive and
important data related to the nation's security. FOI complements continuing proactive information disclosure efforts where
agencies are duty-bound to publish information in the spirit of openness and transparency.
111
The Philippines Constitution of 1987 (Article XIII, Section 17) created the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) of the
Philippines as an independent office with a mandate to promote the protection, respect for and enhancement of human rights.
The role and functions of the Commission are set out in Executive Order No. 163 (1987). In accordance with the Paris Principles
and GANHRI statute, the CHR of the Philippines is accredited as fully compliant to the Paris Principles (see
http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Countries/NHRI/Chart_Status_NIs.pdf).
173
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Net official development assistance,
total and to least developed countries,
as a proportion of the Organization for
17.2.1 Economic Cooperation and N/A
Development (OECD) Development
Assistance Committee donors’ gross
national income (GNI)
Target
Mobilize additional financial resources for developing countries from multiple sources
17.3
Foreign direct investments (FDI),
official development assistance and
17.3.1
South-South Cooperation as a
proportion of total domestic budget112
18.4 11.5 BSP-BOP Statistics;
17.3.1.1 Foreign direct investments (FDI)113 General Appropriations
2016 2019
Act, DBM
2.8 5.8 ODA Portfolio Review,
17.3.1.2 Official Development Assistance NEDA; General
2016 2018
Appropriations Act, DBM
Volume of remittances (in United States 9.7 9.3 BOP, BSP; National
17.3.2
dollars) as a proportion of total GDP 2016 2019 Accounts, PSA
Assist developing countries in attaining long-term debt sustainability through coordinated
Target
policies aimed at fostering debt financing, debt relief and debt restructuring, as appropriate, and
17.4
address the external debt of highly indebted poor countries to reduce debt distress
Debt service as a proportion of exports 9.7 8.4 External Debt Ratios,
17.4.1
of goods and services 2016 2019 BSP
Enhance North-South, South-South and triangular regional and international cooperation on and
Target access to science, technology and innovation and enhance knowledge sharing on mutually agreed
17.6 terms, including through improved coordination among existing mechanisms, in particular at the
United Nations level, and through a global technology facilitation mechanism
Fixed Internet broadband subscriptions 2.1 3.7 Administrative Data,
17.6.2
per 100 inhabitants 2016 2018 NTC
Fully operationalize the technology bank and science, technology and innovation capacity-
Target
building mechanism for least developed countries by 2017 and enhance the use of enabling
17.8
technology, in particular information and communications technology
Proportion of individuals using the
17.8.1
Internet
Proportion of population with exposure 43.9 43.9
17.8.1.1 FLEMMS, PSA
to social interaction in the internet 2013 2013
Proportion of population with exposure 42.2 42.2
17.8.1.2 FLEMMS, PSA
to research work/study in the internet 2013 2013
Enhance international support for implementing effective and targeted capacity-building in
Target
developing countries to support national plans to implement all the sustainable development
17.9
goals, including through North-South, South-South and triangular cooperation
Dollar value of financial and technical
assistance (including through North-
17.9.1 South, South-South and triangular N/A
cooperation) committed to developing
countries
By 2020, enhance capacity-building support to developing countries, including for least
developed countries and small island developing States, to increase significantly the availability
Target
of high-quality, timely and reliable data disaggregated by income, gender, age, race, ethnicity,
17.18
migratory status, disability, geographic location and other characteristics relevant in national
contexts
112
US Dollar exchange rate in 2016 is Php 47.4925, while that of 2017 is Php 50.4037 (Philippine Peso per US Dollar - Daily,
BSP).
113
Foreign direct investments (FDI) for 2019 only covers January to November 2019.
174
Goals/Targets/Indicators Baseline Latest Data Source Agency
Number of countries that have national
statistical legislation that complies with the 1 1
17.18.2 PSA
Fundamental Principles of Official 2013 2019
Statistics114,115
Number of countries with a national
statistical plan that is fully funded and 1 1
17.18.3 PSDP, PSA
under implementation, by source of 2016 2019
funding 116
114
Republic Act No. 10625, An Act Reorganizing the Philippine Statistical System, Repealing for the Purpose Executive Order
Numbered One Hundred Twenty-One, Entitled "Reorganizing and Strengthening the Philippine Statistical System and for Other
Purposes," otherwise known as the "Philippine Statistical Act of 2013"
115
Executive Order No. 352, Designation of Statistical Activities That Will Generate Critical Data for Decision-Making of the
Government and the Private Sector, stipulates the conduct of census on population and housing every 10 years and mid-decade
census primarily to update the population count in all barangays nationwide.
116
Republic Act (RA) No. 10625 or the Philippine Statistical Act of 2013 mandates the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) to
prepare, in consultation with the PSA Board, a Philippine Statistical Development Program (PSDP). The latest PSDP is the PSDP
2018-2023.
175
COMELEC Commission on Elections
CPA Cebu Ports Authority
CRESS Country Report on Support to Statistics
DAR Department of Agrarian Reform
DBM Department of Budget and Management
DENR Department of Environment and Natural Resources
DepEd Department of Education
DILG Department of the Interior and Local Government
DOE Department of Energy
DOH Department of Health
DOST Department of Science and Technology
DSWD Department of Social Welfare and Development
EBEIS Enhanced Basic Education Information System
eFOI Electronic Freedom of Information
EMB Environmental Management Bureau
EPIMB Electric Power Industry Management Bureau
EPPB Energy Policy and Planning Bureau
ERSD, Election Records and Statistics Department Commission on Elections
COMELEC
FIES Family Income and Expenditure Survey
FLEMMS Functional Literacy, Education and Mass Media Survey
FMB Forest Management Bureau
FNRI-DOST Food and Nutrition Research Institute, Department of Science and
Technology
GAA General Appropriations Act
GAD Gender and Development
GDP Gross Domestic Product
GMMS Gender Mainstreaming and Monitoring System
GVA Gross Value Added
HARP HIV/AIDS and Anti-Retroviral Therapy Registry (ART) of the Philippines
HEd Higher Education
IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and Development Management
IFC International Finance Corporation
ILO International Labour Organization
IMF International Monetary Fund
LFS Labor Force Survey
LRMC Light Rail Manila Corporation
LRTA Light Rail Transit Authority
LWUA Local Water Utilities Administration
MCIAA Mactan-Cebu International Airport Authority
MIAA Manila International Airport Authority
MPA Marine Protected Areas
MRT3 Manila Metro Rail Transit System Line 3
NAMRIA National Mapping and Resource Information Authority
176
NAT National Achievement Test
NDHS National Demographic and Health Survey
NDRRMC National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council
NEDA National Economic and Development Authority
NIPAS National Integrated Protected Areas System
NNS National Nutrition Survey
NR to CBD National Report to the Convention on Biological Diversity
NTC National Telecommunications Commission
OCD Office of the Civil Defense
ODA Official Development Assistance
PCW Philippine Commission on Women
PDRI Philippine Dietary Reference Intakes
PNP Philippine National Police
PNR Philippine National Railways
PPA Philippine Ports Authority
PRC Professional Regulation Commission
PSA Philippine Statistics Authority
PSDP Philippine Statistical Development Plan
RBCO-DENR River Basin Control Office, Department of Environment and Natural
Resources
REAMD Rural Electrification Administration Management Division
TESDA Technical Education and Skills Development Authority
TVET Technical-Vocational Education and Training
UNSD United Nations Statistics Division
WASH Water, Sanitation and Hygiene
WDDSP Water District Development Sector Project
WTO World Trade Organization
177
Annex B. Indigenous Peoples’ Access to Safe water and Sanitation, 2010
178
Access to safe water Access to sanitary
toilet facility
2010 Population With access Percent With access Percent
Calinga 6,997 4,375 62.5 3,390 48.4
Clata/Klata 10,427 7,333 70.3 8,726 83.7
Cuyonon/Cuyonen 277,824 156,266 56.2 227,936 82.0
Diangan 12,099 8,953 74.0 10,665 88.1
Dibabawon 30,182 13,869 46.0 22,638 75.0
Dibabeen Mulitaan 564 512 90.8 547 97.0
Dibaben 3,011 2,478 82.3 2,876 95.5
Direrayaan 196 123 62.8 78 39.8
Dumagat/Alta 2,462 1,324 53.8 1,971 80.1
Dumagat 22,926 10,379 45.3 15,426 67.3
Eskaya 2,157 1,492 69.2 2,152 99.8
Gaddang 32,565 27,890 85.6 30,591 93.9
Gubang 1,126 1,068 94.8 983 87.3
Gubatnon 8,355 6,415 76.8 7,383 88.4
Guiangan 3,051 1,745 57.2 2,529 82.9
Halawodnon 2,045 1,368 66.9 1,891 92.5
Hanunuo 29,568 14,310 48.4 6,024 20.4
Henanga 16,291 11,072 68.0 14,222 87.3
Higaonon 335,567 235,935 70.3 266,486 79.4
Ibaloi/Ibaloy 188,453 121,958 64.7 164,167 87.1
Ibanag 402,999 296,304 73.5 383,028 95.0
Ibatan 9,822 8,698 88.6 9,085 92.5
Ifugao 100,980 68,823 68.2 78,945 78.2
Ilianen 3,712 1,908 51.4 1,833 49.4
Illaud 1,932 1,444 74.7 1,873 96.9
Iraya 27,298 14,512 53.2 7,632 28.0
Isinai 11,094 9,575 86.3 10,678 96.3
Isneg/Isnag/Apayao 43,893 21,567 49.1 37,000 84.3
Isoroken 1,414 1,239 87.6 1,306 92.4
Itawis 256,836 207,221 80.7 252,480 98.3
Itneg/Tingguian 47,335 37,437 79.1 44,902 94.9
Ivatan 23,892 22,327 93.4 23,317 97.6
Iwak/Iowak/Owak/I-wak 2,359 1,544 65.5 1,790 75.9
Kabayukan 250 202 80.8 230 92.0
Kabihug 1,227 211 17.2 249 20.3
Kadaklan/kachakran 5,917 4,488 75.8 5,495 92.9
Kailawan/Kaylawan 203 193 95.1 189 93.1
Kalanguya 95,465 48,421 50.7 60,240 63.1
Kalanguya-Ikalahan 1,432 1,212 84.6 1,357 94.8
Kalinga 161,355 124,776 77.3 111,238 68.9
Kamiguin 70,478 66,290 94.1 64,382 91.4
Kankanaey 359,171 265,060 73.8 323,302 90.0
Karao 2,921 2,173 74.4 2,499 85.6
Karay-a 602,417 473,567 78.6 534,527 88.7
Karulano 5,415 2,566 47.4 2,045 37.8
Kaunana 278 233 83.8 235 84.5
179
Access to safe water Access to sanitary
toilet facility
2010 Population With access Percent With access Percent
Ke'ney or Ken-ey/Tau't-
Bato 1,036 523 50.5 488 47.1
Kirenteken 2,327 95 4.1 850 36.5
Lahitanen 3,124 2,859 91.5 2,780 89.0
Lambangian 635 358 56.4 461 72.6
Langilan 3,368 413 12.3 507 15.1
Livunganen 1,748 718 41.1 898 51.4
Mabaka 3,294 2,965 90.0 2,647 80.4
Maeng 14,366 13,924 96.9 14,191 98.8
Magahats 1,370 367 26.8 603 44.0
Mag-anti/Mag-Antsi/Mag-
anchi 1,789 1,241 69.4 651 36.4
Magbekin/Magbukon/Mag
bukun 493 353 71.6 374 75.9
Mag-indi 363 254 70.0 314 86.5
Magkunana 370 250 67.6 302 81.6
Majokayong 2,618 2,211 84.5 2,014 76.9
Malaueg 23,253 14,080 60.6 20,691 89.0
Mamanwa 202,606 179,704 88.7 174,555 86.2
Mandaya 299,987 190,732 63.6 245,144 81.7
Mangguangan 2,867 1,652 57.6 2,049 71.5
Manobo 546,699 307,737 56.3 408,398 74.7
Manobo-Blit 2,475 310 12.5 631 25.5
Manobo-Dulangan 25,095 4,286 17.1 5,593 22.3
Mansaka 56,632 33,749 59.6 49,536 87.5
Manubo-Ubo/Manobo-Ubo 5,491 3,744 68.2 4,549 82.8
Masadiit 8,851 8,734 98.7 7,616 86.0
Matigsalog/Matigsalug 28,559 13,808 48.3 12,580 44.0
Molbog 15,835 6,323 39.9 4,128 26.1
Muyadan 3,618 3,492 96.5 3,502 96.8
Obu-Manuvu/Ubo-Manobo 15,690 7,917 50.5 10,318 65.8
Pala'wan/Palawan-o 98,209 40,645 41.4 48,105 49.0
Pan-ayanon 1,469 1,142 77.7 1,267 86.2
Panay-Bukidnon 80,526 30,304 37.6 59,531 73.9
Parananum 16,846 3,898 23.1 12,960 76.9
Pulangien/Pulangiyen 2,678 1,619 60.5 1,727 64.5
Ratagnon 1,669 1,277 76.5 1,076 64.5
Remontado 2,003 524 26.2 1,455 72.6
Sibuyan Mangyan-
Tagabukid 6,482 3,365 51.9 4,224 65.2
Subanen/Subanon/Subanun 498,272 240,913 48.3 345,738 69.4
T'boli/Tboli 143,909 79,283 55.1 82,539 57.4
Tadyawan 4,489 1,923 42.8 1,711 38.1
Tagabawa 15,676 11,139 71.1 13,682 87.3
Tagakaulo 119,281 45,844 38.4 90,492 75.9
Tagbanua 22,735 10,854 47.7 12,223 53.8
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Access to safe water Access to sanitary
toilet facility
2010 Population With access Percent With access Percent
Tagbanua (Kalamianen) 4,964 1,474 29.7 2,823 56.9
Tagbanua/Calamian 6,464 2,416 37.4 2,676 41.4
Talaandig 58,098 38,164 65.7 37,799 65.1
Talaingod 1,814 603 33.2 867 47.8
Tau-buid 6,290 1,109 17.6 2,110 33.5
Teduray 104,001 34,363 33.0 64,484 62.0
Tigwahanon 7,329 4,927 67.2 4,212 57.5
Tinananen 4,429 2,784 62.9 2,967 67.0
Tuwali 81,613 62,613 76.7 65,270 80.0
Yapayao 3,415 2,960 86.7 3,336 97.7
Yogad 26,155 20,096 76.8 24,953 95.4
Zambal 205,192 152,114 74.1 188,913 92.1
Total 7,900,087 5,147,534 65.2 6,315,938 79.9
Muslim IPs
Badjao 31,833 21,410 67.3 11,525 36.2
Iranon/Iranun/Iraynon 266,845 144,434 54.1 170,247 63.8
Jama Mapun 38,720 13,595 35.1 19,317 49.9
Kalagan 68,087 49,643 72.9 56,584 83.1
Kalibugan/Kolibugan 41,133 21,374 52.0 20,422 49.6
Sama Badjao 9,393 6,207 66.1 3,003 32.0
Sama Bangingi 73,277 33,705 46.0 25,418 34.7
Sama Laut 8,486 1,806 21.3 2,060 24.3
Sama/Samal 362,404 122,397 33.8 173,370 47.8
Total 900,180 414,570 46.1 481,946 53.5
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