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:
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.
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.
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.
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.
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