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Millions of Filipino families vulnerable to poverty: Study

Updated: 2026-02-25 09:36
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A slum area in Manila, the Philippines, in May 2025. GETTY IMAGES

Millions of Filipino families remain at risk of poverty even as the Philippines moves closer to upper-middle-income country status, showing that national economic gains are not trickling down to the poorer segments of society.

The latest study by the state-owned think tank Philippine Institute for Development Studies, or PIDS, showed that, relative to the World Bank's upper-middle-income country poverty threshold of $8.30 a day, 58.7 percent of the Philippine population remains vulnerable to poverty.

Poverty vulnerability rate measures the proportion of households or individuals with a high probability of falling into or remaining in poverty due to unforeseen economic, health, or climate-related shocks. It is generally double or triple the official poverty rate, identifying those near-poor households at risk.

The view comes even as the country's poverty incidence, or the proportion of families or individuals whose per capita income is not sufficient to meet their basic food and nonfood needs based on the government-established poverty threshold, declined to 15.5 percent in 2023 from 24.9 percent a decade earlier, while extreme poverty dropped to 5.3 percent from 24.3 percent.

According to the PIDS, a major factor driving household vulnerability was the pandemic, which disrupted the trajectory of middle-class development and highlighted the fragility of previous economic gains.

"While the country has made significant strides in reducing extreme poverty and in expanding the middle-income class over the past three decades, the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the fragility of these gains and the vulnerability of many households to shocks," the PIDS noted.

"The vision of a predominantly middle-class Philippines by 2040 remains achievable but requires sustained commitment to policies that promote inclusive growth, reduce vulnerability and build resilience," it added.

The PIDS also cited a persistent urban-rural divide as a key driver of vulnerability, with rural areas continuing to lag in economic opportunities, infrastructure and access to essential services.

"This concentration, while beneficial for regional economic growth, may exacerbate inequality and limit long-term growth potential by underutilizing human and natural resources in other regions," the PIDS pointed out.

To address this, the PIDS said the country should also focus on preventing future poverty, not just reducing current poverty, by transitioning toward universal social protection mechanisms.

"This implies that a social protection system focused narrowly on the poorest is no longer sufficient in a context where poverty is increasingly dynamic and shock-driven. As the Philippines approaches upper-middle income status, social protection must therefore evolve from a primarily poverty-alleviation instrument into a broader system for preventing downward mobility and strengthening household resilience," the PIDS said.

The government reported that the number of people living in poverty decreased by 2.4 million from 2021 to 2023, bringing the total to 17.5 million Filipinos.

Despite the country's economic gains, the Philippines remains a lower-middle-income economy, narrowly missing the World Bank's gross national income, or GNI, per capita threshold by $26. The country recorded a GNI per capita of $4,470, just below the $4,496 cutoff for upper-middle-income status.

Rebound expectations

Finance Secretary Frederick Go earlier expressed optimism that the Philippines can still reach upper-middle-income country status this year, amid expectations of an economic rebound and steady growth.

This contrasts with the more pessimistic expectations of the private sector.

An Inquirer poll of 14 economists in January yielded a median growth estimate of 4.2 percent for the fourth quarter of 2025, indicating that average growth last year may have settled at 4.8 percent.

If borne out, the figure would fall well short of the government's 5.5 to 6.5 percent growth target for 2025, extending a streak of missed annual goals that began in 2023.

At the same time, the World Bank requires a country's GNI per capita to exceed the benchmark for three consecutive years before formal reclassification.

The year 2026 is seen as critical for the country, coming after its economic confidence was shaken by the fallout from a flood-control corruption scandal.

The administration has already downgraded growth targets for 2026 to 2028 in anticipation of another economic shortfall in 2025.

PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER

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