Sunday, April 19, 2026

BELIEVE IT OR NOT, THERE IS NO SINGLE AGENCY DIRECTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR POVERTY REDUCTION

BELIEVE IT OR NOT, THERE IS NO SINGLE AGENCY DIRECTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR POVERTY REDUCTION

Here’s a provocative truth: despite decades of lip-service, in the Philippines there is no single agency that holds direct, exclusive responsibility for reducing poverty. It sounds absurd — yet look closely and the institutional maze confirms it.

One of the clearest root causes of this confusion is the sloppy interchange of two very different concepts: poverty alleviation and poverty reduction. They are not the same. Alleviation is about cushioning the blow. Think emergency food packs after a typhoon, the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) conditional cash transfers or disaster relief operations. Reduction, on the other hand, means reducing the poverty rate, physically lifting people above the poverty line in a structured, sustained way.

When agencies treat the two as if they were interchangeable, we end up measuring success in the wrong units. In this country, many government officials treat the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) as the agency “in charge” of poverty reduction. But if you look at what DSWD mostly does — dole-outs, subsidies, social protection — it aligns more with alleviation. That’s fine, but it doesn’t equal poverty reduction. Dole-outs may cushion the blow of poverty — they ease suffering — but they cannot, on their own, raise families above the poverty threshold.

Then there’s the National Anti‑Poverty Commission (NAPC). Its mandate under RA 8425 is to coordinate, ensure representation of basic sectors and align programs across national and local government units. But crucially, NAPC is not an implementing agency delivering livelihood, jobs or structural reform programs. It is into policy, coordination, and oversight.

So if neither DSWD (implementer of alleviation) nor NAPC (coordinator) singly owns poverty reduction, who then does? The answer: apparently nobody. That institutional black hole is precisely why our progress is patchy, and why one would find a governor or mayor asking “Is this our agency’s job or theirs?” when it comes to raising household incomes, creating jobs, eliminating structural barriers.

Let’s run some numbers to ground this. According to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), the poverty incidence dropped to about 15.5 % in 2023 from 18.1 % in 2021. That’s about 17.5 million Filipinos living below the poverty line. Rural poverty stands at 22.1 % while urban poverty is 10.3 %. Is that good? In relative terms yes, but the pace is too slow and the threshold — which uses roughly ₱91 per person per day in 2023 — has been criticized as too low. So even what we define as “poor” may mask deeper deprivations.

Given this institutional confusion and these worrying data, my answer is simple: localize the poverty reduction targets. Let the local government units (LGUs) set their own poverty-reduction goals, monitor and report them transparently, and be held accountable. Yes, the national actors have their role, but the actual work of raising incomes, creating employment, and reforming local systems happens locally.

Here’s what I suggest:

  1. LGUs lead poverty-reduction targets: each city, municipality, barangay sets a goal (say reducing poverty incidence by X percentage points in three years), publishes a dashboard and reports annually.

  2. Raise the minimum wage locally: In partnership with the local wage boards, LGUs should push the minimum wage so that anyone working full-time on minimum wage should arguably live above the poverty line. I know this might sound naïve, but if your wage equals the poverty line or less, we’ve lost the game.

  3. Direct LGU role in unemployment and job creation: Promoting local businesses, micro-enterprises, cooperatives; enabling skills training; attracting investment; supporting sectors most affected (farmers, fisherfolk, indigenous peoples). After all, poverty isn’t just about low income — it’s about no income, few assets, limited opportunities.

  4. A real “anti-poverty czar”: Not a mere policy-maker, but someone with cross-agency power, local-national reach, measurable targets, the budget, and the mandate to deliver structural poverty reduction, not just management of social protection.

  5. A national policy differentiation: Government must formally recognize that “poverty alleviation” (short-term, cushioning) is not the same as “poverty reduction” (structural, long-term). Without that policy clarity, programs will keep being mis-labelled and mis-executed.

Let me emphasize: I’m not against DSWD or NAPC. They have meaningful roles. DSWD’s social protection frameworks are essential — in fact, the 4Ps law (RA 11310) designates it as a “national poverty reduction strategy”. But the danger lies in conflating relief with transformation. NAPC does coordination but lacks implementing teeth. So the gap is not weak agencies; it is fragmented responsibility.

Systems thinking tells us: when you scatter tasks across too many nodes without a clear “owner”, accountability suffers, coordination falters, data dilute, and programs overlap. In poverty reduction’s life-cycle — diagnosing root causes, designing structural interventions (jobs, land reform, education, health, assets), implementing them, measuring outcomes — someone must own the chain end-to-end (or at least the accountability). We currently don’t.

Why should you care? Because the people we see on the streets, in the fields, in the coastal barangays — they don’t just need another relief box. They need real transformation: access to decent jobs, security in livelihoods, dignity. And if we keep churning out cash transfers and food packs, we’ll keep spinning our wheels.

So here are my question prompts:

  • If an LGU sets its own poverty-reduction target, what happens if it fails? Are there consequences, incentives?

  • How can we ensure local businesses are prioritized for job creation in areas of high poverty?

  • What metrics should we use to measure poverty reduction, not just alleviation? Depth of poverty, asset accumulation, income mobility?

  • Will this “anti-poverty czar” idea survive the politics? What institutional design would make it durable beyond administrations?

In my view, poverty reduction must be local and structural. The national government can set frameworks and provide funding, but the real actors are municipalities, cities, and barangays. They are the closest to the people; they know the terrain, the sectors, the barriers. Let’s empower them. Let’s give them clear targets, real jobs mandates, monitoring tools and accountability.

Until we do that, we will keep celebrating relief efforts and calling them “poverty reduction”. But the poverty rate will only inch down slowly. Let’s stop mistaking caring for transforming. If we really believe that no Filipino should live below the poverty line — then let’s assign ownership and build the long-term change.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-20-2026


Saturday, April 18, 2026

COOPERATIVE OWNED GROCERY STORES

 COOPERATIVE OWNED GROCERY STORES

Cooperative-owned grocery stores are not new in the Philippines. In fact, reports say there are already hundreds operating under various cooperatives. But that makes me wonder—if we already have more than 16,000 registered cooperatives nationwide, why are there not thousands of grocery stores by now?

I’ve been involved with two cooperative stores in the past, so I’ve seen both the promise and the pitfalls firsthand. Lack of capital is often mentioned as the main problem. But I don’t think that’s entirely true. Cooperatives, by their very nature, can pool resources from their members. What I see as the real challenge is a lack of interest—or perhaps a lack of management and procurement skills to keep such stores competitive and sustainable.

Some co-op managers struggle to source high-quality goods at reasonable prices. Without strong supplier networks or credit lines, many are forced to rely on consignment arrangements that limit their options and profitability. But if the issue is skills and training, isn’t that something we can solve? We already have thousands of capable cooperative leaders. What they need now is business management, procurement know-how, and digital tools to modernize operations.

Why Cooperative Grocery Stores Matter

Cooperative grocery stores are one of the most direct ways to make everyday life more affordable for ordinary Filipinos. Members enjoy a double benefit: they can save on essential goods and earn dividends or patronage rebates at the end of the year.

In contrast, when we buy from commercial grocery chains, we pay full price—and all profits go to corporate shareholders. There’s no community benefit, no ownership, and no return. Cooperative stores, on the other hand, turn customers into co-owners. That’s what economic democracy looks like in practice.

What’s Already Working

There are already some inspiring examples of cooperative-owned grocery stores across the country:

  1. COOP Fresh (Metro Manila) – a tech-enabled, cashless cooperative grocery launched in 2020. It uses real-time inventory systems and AI tools to manage operations, showing that cooperatives can innovate just like any big retailer.

  2. San Dionisio Credit Cooperative (SDCC) in Parañaque – one of the country’s most successful cooperatives, which runs its own grocery alongside a pharmacy and insurance services.

  3. Tagum Cooperative (Davao del Norte) – operates consumer stores offering groceries and household goods to members and nearby communities.

  4. Baguio-Benguet Community Credit Cooperative (BBCCC) – runs a cooperative store offering food, school supplies, and home essentials.

  5. LCC (Liberty Commercial Center) in the Bicol Region – now a full-scale retail chain but originally founded as a cooperative enterprise.

So yes, it can be done—and done well. The question is: how do we scale it up?

The Numbers and the Opportunity

According to the Cooperative Development Authority (CDA), there are more than 16,000 cooperatives in the Philippines. A large portion of these are multi-purpose cooperatives that already handle savings, credit, and livelihood programs. Adding grocery operations would not be a huge leap. In fact, it’s a natural extension of their purpose: to meet members’ economic needs collectively.

Yet, grocery operations are not separately categorized under CDA’s records. Many are embedded within multi-purpose co-ops and thus go unnoticed. But make no mistake—hundreds of such community stores are already alive and thriving, from city co-ops to barangay-level initiatives.

If even 10% of our existing cooperatives launched grocery stores, we could have at least 1,600 community-owned retail outlets across the country—each one promoting local products, fair pricing, and cooperative employment.

Building Capacity and Technology

One idea worth exploring is technology transfer within the cooperative movement. Successful co-op stores like COOP Fresh or SDCC could mentor new ones—sharing their business models, supplier contacts, and digital systems.

Technology can also help smaller cooperatives catch up. Modern Point-of-Sale (POS) systems, Customer Relationship Management (CRM) tools, blockchain-based inventory systems, and AI-driven demand forecasting can make operations more efficient and transparent.

On my part, I’m ready to help any cooperative that needs training in these areas. Digital transformation isn’t just for corporations. Cooperatives, too, can embrace technology to serve their communities better.

Strengthening Local Economies

Cooperative-owned grocery stores don’t just help consumers—they also support producers. They can become ready markets for the harvests of farmer cooperatives, linking rural and urban economies in a sustainable loop. This could reduce dependency on middlemen, increase farmers’ incomes, and promote food sovereignty.

Imagine a network where rice from a farmers’ cooperative in Nueva Ecija is sold in a grocery owned by an urban cooperative in Quezon City. Both groups win—and the community gets affordable, local food in return.

A Call to Action

The challenge, then, is not feasibility but focus. The cooperative movement must reimagine itself—not just as a credit or lending system, but as a community-based economy where members meet their daily needs through shared enterprise.

The CDA, LGUs, and cooperative federations could collaborate on a national program to establish and support cooperative grocery stores—complete with training, startup grants, and technology integration.

If the goal is to make food and essentials more affordable, strengthen local economies, and democratize ownership, cooperative grocery stores are one of the best tools we already have.

The question is not can we do it—but when will we decide to make it happen?

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-19-2026


Friday, April 17, 2026

COOPERATIVE OWNED COMMUNITY PHARMACIES

 COOPERATIVE OWNED COMMUNITY PHARMACIES

Can a small cooperative-owned community pharmacy compete with a giant drugstore chain? My answer is a resounding yes—and not just as a matter of optimism, but of economic logic and social vision.

For one, cooperatives already have a built-in customer base: their members. That’s an advantage no big corporation can simply buy. A cooperative pharmacy starts with trust—an asset that’s priceless in a sector where people’s health and lives are on the line. Members already have a reason to support their own cooperative, and in return, the cooperative has a duty to provide affordable, safe, and ethical access to medicines.

But here’s another reason: a cooperative can do everything a corporation can do. It can buy, sell, hire, manage, and expand. The only limits are compliance and capital. Yet, if we think collectively, the combined financial strength of over 16,000 registered cooperatives in the Philippines could easily surpass that of the biggest drugstore chain in the country. Imagine if even a fraction of these cooperatives each set up one community pharmacy—what a revolution in health access that would be.

The Legal and Practical Framework

Let’s get the basics right. To operate a cooperative pharmacy in the Philippines, the cooperative must secure a License to Operate (LTO) from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), employ a PRC-licensed pharmacist, register with the Cooperative Development Authority (CDA), and obtain permits from the Local Government Unit (LGU).

In short, a cooperative pharmacy must play by the same rules as a commercial one—but that’s not a disadvantage. Compliance ensures safety and trust. In fact, cooperative pharmacies already exist in small but inspiring numbers:

  • Sta. Monica of Pangasinan Multi-Purpose Cooperative, which runs a pharmacy for members’ health needs;

  • San Dionisio Credit Cooperative (SDCC) in Parañaque, which integrates pharmacy services with insurance and wellness programs;

  • Tagum Cooperative in Davao del Norte, whose community pharmacy supports both members and residents; and

  • Baguio-Benguet Community Credit Cooperative, which combines pharmacy access with preventive health care.

These examples prove the model works. What’s lacking is scale—and public awareness.

Global Lessons, Local Application

We don’t need to reinvent the wheel. Countries like Italy, Spain, Finland, and India have long supported cooperative-owned pharmacies.
In Italy, municipal and consumer cooperatives operate pharmacies to stabilize medicine prices.
In Spain, pharmacist cooperatives like Cofares ensure fair pricing and distribution.
In Finland, community pharmacies are often run by cooperative networks to ensure access even in rural areas.
And in India, states like Kerala and Tamil Nadu promote cooperative drug stores that sell affordable generics—models that blend community ownership with professional standards.

So why not in the Philippines? Why can’t our cooperatives—especially those already involved in agriculture, transport, and credit—add healthcare and pharmaceuticals to their portfolios? If our cooperatives can sell rice, fertilizers, or fuel, why not medicine?

The Digital Edge

Today’s cooperatives are no longer limited to physical stores. New technologies—blockchain for traceability, artificial intelligence for inventory management, and e-commerce for distribution—can make cooperative pharmacies more efficient and transparent. Blockchain, for instance, can help track medicine sources and prevent counterfeiting. Telepharmacy and mobile pharmacy units can extend services to remote barangays where commercial chains never reach.

There’s also room for innovation in packaging, recycling, and cooperative insurance pooling. Imagine a digital cooperative pharmacy network that links small rural branches to urban suppliers under one secure digital ledger. That would not only lower costs but ensure accountability.

Empowering Pharmacists and Communities

A common question arises: can customers own a pharmacy even if they’re not pharmacists? The answer is yes—through a cooperative model. Ownership lies with members, but licensed pharmacists must still handle the professional and regulatory aspects. This division of roles ensures that business decisions remain democratic while healthcare standards remain professional.

For Filipino pharmacists, this opens new opportunities. Instead of working solely for corporate chains, they can work with their communities—earning fair wages, gaining autonomy, and contributing directly to public health.

A Call to Cooperatives

The beauty of the cooperative model is that it aligns business with public good. A cooperative-owned community pharmacy is not just a store; it’s a statement—that access to medicine should not be a privilege, and that profits should serve people, not the other way around.

If even 10% of our 16,000 cooperatives open pharmacies, we could instantly have over 1,600 community-owned health access points across the country. Add telepharmacy and e-commerce, and no barangay would ever be too far from essential medicines again.

Perhaps what’s new is not the idea itself, but the realization that it’s time to act on it. The infrastructure is there. The people are there. The need is urgent.

As for me, I am ready to help any cooperative willing to take this bold step—because good health should never be monopolized, and community empowerment begins when people take control of their own well-being.

Affordable medicine, ethical access, and community ownership—these are not just dreams. They are possibilities waiting for cooperatives to turn them into reality.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-18-2026


Thursday, April 16, 2026

A CAMPAIGN FOR CHEMICAL FREE FOOD WINS IN NEW ZEALAND

A CAMPAIGN FOR CHEMICAL FREE FOOD WINS IN NEW ZEALAND

Just when the fight for clean food and healthy soil seemed like a losing battle — now comes this victory. The win in New Zealand for food sovereignty is real, and it has lessons for us here in the Philippines.

The New Zealand Moment

In New Zealand, the government agency New Zealand Food Safety (operating under Ministry for Primary Industries, MPI) had proposed to dramatically raise the maximum residue level (MRL) of herbicides in staple cereals – from the default of 0.1 mg/kg up to 10 mg/kg for wheat, barley and oats, and 6 mg/kg for peas. Many consumer-environment-farm advocates said NO WAY. Over 3,100 public submissions poured in. The result: the herbicide entry in the MRL notice remained unchanged. 

This is a powerful moment for grassroots advocacy and food sovereignty. The decision to maintain low herbicide residue limits (and at least to keep the entry unchanged while consultation is ongoing) reflects a major win for public health, soil protection, and democratic engagement.

What this victory represents

  • Community-led resistance: The fact that more than 3,100 submissions were lodged shows that when everyday people, farmers, activists and consumers join together, policy can shift.

  • Precautionary principle upheld: By rejecting the proposal to increase chemical residues by up to 100‐fold, the decision signals that long-term health and ecological integrity matter more than short-term convenience.

  • Momentum for clean food systems: This sets a precedent. If New Zealand can hold the line, other countries may follow.

So… could we duplicate that win here in the Philippines?

Yes — and I believe we must try. Here are the questions we need to ask ourselves:

  • Is there hope that this could happen here? Yes — hope exists when people speak out.

  • Could our government here listen if enough people speak out? It’s possible. The New Zealand example shows that public submissions work.

  • Or will we just give up, thinking: “We are not like the New Zealanders; we can’t do what they have done”? That would be a mistake. We are able to organize, engage, petition, and raise public awareness.

  • Is the Philippine government even aware of the need to set low herbicide limits? Probably not fully, or at least it doesn’t appear to be a major public policy fight yet.

What should we watch and do?

Given our interest in circular design, community restoration and chemical-free systems, here are strategic implications:

  • Barangay-level food safety modules: Local government units and farmers’ groups should be educated on chemical-free practices and soil health.

  • Policy-mapping for agrochemical regulation: Compare Philippine thresholds for herbicides and other agrichemicals with the New Zealand precedent. Ask: do we have default limits? Are they being reviewed?

  • Community petition frameworks: Use petitions, public submissions, social media, local government resolutions. The New Zealand case shows the power of public voice.

Caveats & realities

  • We should be cautious about presenting the New Zealand story as already done. The consultation was concluded with over 3,100 submissions; but the final decision on herbicide MRLs remains under consideration.

  • The proposed increase in New Zealand was controversial because many believe the testing regime was weak, and that the very practice of pre-harvest desiccation (spraying herbicide to dry crops before harvest) is questionable. 

  • The Philippines’ context is different: climate, cropping systems, trade-markets, regulatory capacity all differ. We must adapt, not just copy.

My take and suggestions

I strongly suggest that we in the Philippines begin a campaign for “herbicide-tight” food production, rooted in the following points:

  1. Raise awareness: Many consumers may not know what herbicides are nor what residue limits mean. Education matters.

  2. Mobilize a coalition: Farmers practicing regenerative agriculture, civil society, consumer groups, health advocates can join forces.

  3. Engage LGUs: Local governments, barangays, provinces can pass resolutions or local ordinances favoring low-chemical or chemical-free grains and legumes.

  4. Use public consultation processes: Insist that any change to pesticide/chemical/residue regulation must go through open consultation with submissions.

  5. Benchmark: Use New Zealand’s current default of 0.1 mg/kg for certain cereals as a reference. Ask: what is our current limit in the Philippines? Is it being reviewed?

  6. Push for transparency: Make sure that residue surveys, testing of food, regulatory decisions are public. One of the objections in New Zealand was lack of updated testing. 

Final thought

This New Zealand “small win” is more than symbolic. It is a beacon for those of us in the Philippines who believe in food sovereignty, healthy soil, dignified farming systems. We should not assume “we are not like New Zealand”; rather, we should learn from it, adapt it, and apply it. If 3,100+ voices in New Zealand made a difference, imagine what a coalition of thousands in the Philippines could achieve.

Let us treat this as our invitation to action – to speak, mobilize, petition, collaborate. The government can listen – if enough of us make our voices clear. And in doing so, we honor the farmers, the soil, and the future of Philippine food.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-17-2026


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