Senate Minority leader Koko Pimentel III called on the country’s economic managers to hasten solutions to the rising inflation in the country which peaked at 8.7 percent in January 2023, an all-time high since November 2008.
Pimentel issued the statement as he expressed dismay at the economic managers’ lack of concrete plans and swift action to address inflation and help the millions of Filipinos whose purchasing power continues to decline.
“We have seen the first symptoms of worsening inflation with the sugar crisis in the second half of 2022 followed by the onion crisis in the last quarter. These should have behooved our economic managers including the agriculture sector to look closely at agricultural production and food supply augmentation,” the veteran legislator said.
The PDP Laban chairman and Senate’s chief fiscalizer emphasized that if only the government has put measures in place to monitor and strengthen agricultural production and empower small farmers and food producers, food inflation will not be as high as 11.2 percent which was only 1.6 percent at the same time last year.
“We have known for a long time that there is a gap between our farmers and the market, and the middlemen that usually connect the two earn so much, leaving our farmers shortchanged, but what exactly are the concrete steps we are doing to change this,” the seasoned lawmaker stressed.
“It is disheartening that the poorest in our nation suffer the hardest as prices of essential commodities continue to rise.”
“For the bottom 30 percent of income households, the inflation rate equates to 9.7 percent. It is disheartening that the poorest in our nation suffer the hardest as prices of essential commodities continue to rise and our government seems to just watch prices fluctuate,” the senator added.
Apart from the plight of the farmers, he also recalled that minimum wage earners only received an additional 33 pesos in June 2022.
“With the increasing inflation, the essential needs that a 570-peso salary for non-agriculture workers and a 533-peso salary for manufacturing, agriculture and service industries can purchase get slimmer and slimmer,” Pimentel noted.
He said that “instead of focusing on the Maharlika Investment Fund, all hands should be on deck to address the serious problem of inflation.”
“I have not seen any concrete plan or a roadmap to address the problem.”
“Unfortunately, I have not seen any concrete plan or a roadmap to address the problem,” Pimentel lamented.
“There are so many pressing issues that need more of our attention and efforts, we should be prioritizing these especially matters that concern the ordinary and marginalized Filipinos,” he concluded.