Family of 4 needs P120K monthly`
>> Tuesday, July 5, 2016
Most Filipinos
aspire for a “simple and comfortable life” in which they can afford to buy a
car and a medium-sized house, send their children to college, regularly spend
leisure time with family and friends and take occasional trips around the
country.
But this may not
be so simple after all, as a family of four must have a gross monthly income of
at least P120,000 at 2015 prices to afford things that they believe can make
life easier for their families, according to the National Economic and
Development Authority (NEDA).
Expounding on
the results of its Ambisyon Natin 2040 survey which had its soft launch in
March, NEDA director general Emmanuel Esguerra said the lifestyle aspired for
by most Filipinos (79 percent of survey respondents) is actually that of a
middle class living standard centered on the family.
“In speaking
about these aspirations in life, words like ‘magulang,’ ‘anak’ and ‘pamilya’
were often used. At first, we thought we were just getting modest aspiration
goals but these are actually middle class aspirations,” said the NEDA chief
during the Ambisyon Natin 2040 Media Forum with the Economic Journalists
Association of the Philippines (EJAP).
The income level
of at least P120,000 was arrived at factoring in the amortizations that would
have to be made for a car, a house and lot, as well as taxes that would have to
be paid and allowances for emergency needs and exigencies.
The respondents
further defined a “simple and comfortable life” as one “free from worry and
hardships” with their families.
The Ambisyon Natin
2040 survey is not a national economic plan tied to an economic growth
strategy. Rather, it was meant to determine the medium-term and short-term
aspirations of Filipinos regarding standard of living, finances, security and
ease of transacting with the government within a generation’s time.
The survey,
initiated last year and completed in February, utilized face-to-face interviews
with 10,000 persons across all economic classes. The respondents were between
15 and 50 years old.
Respondents were
picked from both urban and rural areas nationwide, except in high-risk areas
such as Abra, Sulu and Basilan as well as in provinces with small population
such as Apayao, Batanes, Siquijor, Camiguin and Dinagat Islands.
“AmbisyonNatin
2040 is not a plan. It is a vision around which we hope our people can unite,”
said Esguerra, noting that NEDA has been communicating this vision with various
civil society groups and government organizations.
NEDA deputy
director general Rosemarie Edillon said most Filipinos fail to attain this kind
of lifestyle partly because many are trapped in the cycle of poverty as parents
have failed to secure a comfortable retirement, thus burdening their children,
who themselves fail to secure their own future.
Such a cycle,
she said, leads to missed demographic dividend.
As such, she
said it is important for Filipinos to be financially literate and for women to
have increased participation in the labor force.
She said that
with the right policies for economic and human development, the Philippines can
be an advanced income economy by 2040, comparable to Malaysia which has a per
capita income of $11,000. Greater attention, she said, should be given to
programs in housing, connectivity, education, health and countryside
development.
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