QUEZON CITY, (PA) –The Department of Social Welfare & Development’s Food Stamp Program (FSP) which is currently in its pilot run is slated to scale up in the middle 2024, according DSWD Secretary Rex Gatchalian.
He said, the FSP will benefit a total of 1 million families who are classified as ‘food poor’ according to the criteria and definitions set by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) alongside pregnant and nursing mothers.
The pilot areas include Tondo, Manila and the regions of Cagayan Valley, Bicol, Caraga and the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).
According to Gatchalian said, President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr.has already approved the regular budget of the FSP for 2024 to ensure that 1 million “food poor” families will continue to benefit under the FSP’s meal augmentation program.
He said that even before the recent Social Weather Station (SWS) survey on hunger and poverty, the President already instructed the DSWD to come up with innovative programs to combat and end hunger and poverty in the country.
Gatchalian said, the instruction on the DSWD is hinged on President Marcos’ desire to end hunger and make a more inclusive country where no one is left behind.
“This is the reason why the DSWD came up with the Food Stamp Program (FSP), which was designed primarily to alleviate the lingering incidence of food poverty and malnutrition among low-income Filipino households through the provision of meal augmentation worth PHP 3,000 on a monthly basis,” Gatchalian explained.
“There is also the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program or 4Ps wherein 4.4 million ‘poorest of the poor’ households or 20 million individuals continue to benefit from the program through the monthly subsidy for their children’s education as well as monthly health subsidy,” the DSWD chief said.
Gatchalian said the 4.4 million families benefitting from 4Ps plus the 1 million “food-poor” families under the Food Stamp Program is expected to push down further the number of poor families in the coming months.
“This target of bringing down the number of people rating themselves as “poor” is based on the positive note in the SWS survey showing that 25% of families rating themselves as “hindi mahirap” or “not poor,” is a three-point increase from the June n[umbers,” the DSWD chief said.
The latest SWS survey showed that nearly half or 48% of Filipino families rated themselves as poor during the third quarter of the year. Conducted from September 28 to October 1, the SWS survey estimates that around 13.2 million families consider themselves as poor — higher than the 12.5 million estimated in June 2023.
The DSWD envisions all Filipinos to be free from hunger and poverty, to have equal access to opportunities, and enabled by a fair, just, and peaceful society.
“This DSWD vision is coupled with the mission to lead in the formulation , implementation, and coordination of social welfare and development policies and programs for and with the poor, vulnerable and disadvantaged,” Gatchalian said. (dswd/pia-ncr)