Poverty in the Philippines
Despite the more-or-less sustained economic growth from 1985 to 1997, the poorest 20% of the population only improved their income 0.5% for every 1% growth in average income. In other words, they slipped further behind and income inequality became even more extreme.
MALNUTRITION and HUNGER
There are now approximately 4 million (32%) preschool children who are underweight-for-age, 3 million (20%) adolescents who are underweight-for-age, and 5 million (13.2%) adults who are chronically energy deficient. Vitamin A deficiency is a serious problem, with 7% of pregnant women and 8% of infants under six months being severely deficient. Iron deficiency anemia affects 57% of infants, 51% of pregnant women, and 46% of lactating women.
The primary cause of malnutrition is the inequitable distribution of food, which is related of course to poverty. The typical Filipino diet is grossly inadequate for energy and other nutrients, causing human bodies to compensate for inadequate energy intake by utilizing protein as an energy source; the usual result is PEM. This situation is unlikely to improve as long as an estimated 28 million Filipinos are unable to buy food to meet basic nutritional requirements.
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Clarence Henderson's Pearl of the Orient Seas


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POVERTY IN THE PHILIPPINES by the World Bank Group "http://www.worldbank.org/eapsocial/countries/phil/pov1.htm"
The incidence of poverty declined between 1985 and 1995, in contrast to the preceding decade, and much of the reduction accrued to the poorest of the poor. However the income distribution inched up slightly and remained highly skewed. The Philippines was the only large country in East Asia where the absolute number of people living on less than $1 a day did not decline over the 1985-1995 period (see Table 1). Recent data suggests that while the incidence of poverty has declined further in 1997, inequality has risen quite sharply.
Site of Table 1. Poverty in East Asia 1975-1995
http://sixsigmaway.us/blogs/media/povertytable1.html
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