October 14th, 2022
House Ways and Means Chair Joey Sarte Salceda (Albay, 2nd district) says that the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) and other individual and household-level interventions “while essential, are not sufficient conditions for lifting millions out of poverty” and that investments in rural development and urban poor communities are still needed, amid the release of a 62-page performance audit report on 4Ps posted on the COA website last week, which stated that about 90 percent of the active beneficiaries of the government’s Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) are still below the poverty threshold.
The report noted that out of some 4.2 million active 4Ps beneficiaries who have been on the program for seven to 13 years, 90 percent or a total of 3,820,012 households, are still below the poverty threshold.
“Money alone is not enough. While it creates virtuous cycles in local economies, and while it provides a basic social safety net that allows poor households to take more rewarding risks, money is not enough. Money on an individual and household level is not enough,” Salceda said.
“The DSWD’s programs to protect families from the worst social and economic conditions were never meant to stand alone. They should always be part of a broader plan to revitalize urban and rural communities,” Salceda said.
“The aim should still be to create better conditions for farming, for working, and for entrepreneurship. That means investments in rural and urban development.”
Salceda suggested that a convergence plan between major programs of the DSWD and other government agencies towards lifting 4Ps beneficiaries out of poverty should be in place.
“I don’t think it’s the responsibility of the DSWD alone to meet the recommendations of the COA report when it clearly requires a whole of government approach.”
Salceda is proposing that the DSWD and other government agencies issue a Joint Memorandum Circular on RA 11310 or the 4Ps Law, to contain the following interventions:
“I commend Secretary Tulfo’s intent to respond to the COA report’s findings on the longstanding problems of 4Ps head on. The next step is to actually solve those problems, and it will require more than just the DSWD’s efforts.”