POVERTY
POVERTY
POVERTY
Poverty in the Philippines is a serious problem that affects a third of the population and
includes 30 million families who earn less than $1.25 a day It is caused by
corruption, lack of education and health care, political conflicts, natural disasters, low
economic growth, a weak agricultural sector, increased population rates and a high
volume of inequality Poverty contributes to social ills such as crime, health problems,
and malnutrition.
Many Filipinos are unable to afford housing and turn to the streets for accommodation.
Some Filipinos leave the country to pursue careers abroad that pay more. According to
official government statistics, in 2021, the Philippine poverty rate rose to 18.1% or
roughly 19.99 million Filipinos, after the COVID-19 pandemic hampered years of
government poverty reduction efforts this was higher than the 16.6% or 17.67 million
recorded in 2018 but lower than the 25.2% poverty rate recorded in 2012.
DISCRIMINATION
Discrimination is the differential or less favourable treatment of persons or groups for
reasons of certain traits. It can occur in various settings, such as school, work, or public
places. It can result in harm, disadvantage, stress, or legal consequences for the targets
of discrimination. The law prohibits discrimination based on age, disability, genetic
information, national origin, race, color, religion, sex, pregnancy, gender identity, sexual
orientation, or relationship to another person.
The Philippine society is full of discrimination. Crazy as it may seem but it is very
rampant that it becomes a hobby for other people. People discriminate without even
realizing that they are committing a serious mistake. What’s sad about this prejudicial
treatment is that it exists everywhere and can happen anytime.
It may be at school, in a workplace, or even at one’s home. What’s even sadder is that,
it is being disregarded by a lot of people and somehow treated as if it is not an alarming
issue—that is why discrimination doesn’t stop. A lot of people are becoming a victim of
this treatment, the same thing with people who commits this action.
INEQUALITY
Inequality refers to the phenomenon of unequal and/or unjust distribution of resources
and opportunities among members of a given society. The term inequality may mean
different things to different people and in different contexts.
Inequality remains high: the top 1 percent of earners together captures 17 percent of
national income, with only 14 percent being shared by the bottom 50 percent. With an
income Gini coefficient of 42.3 percent in 2018, the Philippines had one of the highest
rates of income inequality in East Asia. Unequal opportunities, lack of access to tertiary
education and a scarcity of skills, coupled with inequality in returns to college education,
gendered social norms and childcare, and spatial gaps, sustain inequality.
DATA IN BRGY. KALAYAAN
What is KALAHI-CIDSS?
• The Kapit‐Bisig Laban sa Kahirapan ‐ Comprehensive and Integrated Delivery of
Social Services or Kalahi‐ CIDSS program is a poverty alleviation program of the DSWD
that uses a community‐driven development (CDD) approach. The program provides
resources to poor rural municipalities for public goods investment and promote people’s
participation in governance.
The Supplementary Feeding Program is the provision of food, in addition to the regular
meals, to currently enrolled day care center children. This is in the form of hot meals,
as recommended by Food and Nutrition Research Institute (FNRI), and served during
break time to children in day care center.
Beneficiaries of the program are three-year-old and four-year-old children not in the
Department of Education pre-school children but in day care.
This program is implemented in response to the 2006 Family Income and Expenditure
Survey (FIES) conducted by the National Statistics Office which should that 11 percent
of Filipino families had income that cannot buy the food needed by family members for
nutritional wel-being and health. These families can be considered as hungry and food
poor. Along with Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program, KALAHI-CIDSS or Kapit Bisig
Laban sa Kahirapan-Comprehensive and Integrated Delivery of Social Services and
Sustainable Livelihood Program, Supplementary Feeding seeks to achieve Millennium
Development Goal No. 1, which is eradicating extreme poverty and hunger.