Inflation still top concern of most Filipinos — Pulse Asia
At A Glance
- Based on the survey of 1,200 respondents conducted from Dec. 3 to 7, 2023, Pulse Asia found that 72 percent of Filipino adults consider "controlling inflation" to be an urgent national concern.
- Increasing worker's pay is the second most frequently mentioned urgent national concern (40 percent).
- Filipinos are least concerned with helping small entrepreneurs, enforcing the rule of law, reducing the amount of taxes paid by citizens, promoting peace, protecting the environment, defending national territorial integrity, dealing with terrorism, and protecting overseas Filipino workers.
Majority of Filipinos still see inflation as an urgent issue that the current administration must address immediately, Pulse Asia’s survey results released on Monday, Jan. 8 showed.
Based on the survey of 1,200 respondents conducted from Dec. 3 to 7, 2023, Pulse Asia found that 72 percent of Filipino adults consider “controlling inflation” to be an urgent national concern.
“Out of 16 issues included in this particular probe, it is the only issue considered as urgent by most adults,” Pulse Asia said in its report.
Increasing worker’s pay is the second most frequently mentioned urgent national concern (40 percent).
A quarter of Filipinos cited job creation (28 percent) and poverty reduction (25 percent) as top priorities.
Other pressing issues identified in the survey included fighting corruption (19 percent), helping farmers (18 percent), addressing involuntary hunger (18 percent), and combating criminality (15 percent).
Meanwhile, Filipinos are least concerned with helping small entrepreneurs (11 percent), enforcing the rule of law (10 percent), reducing the amount of taxes paid by citizens (10 percent), promoting peace (9 percent), protecting the environment (7 percent), defending national territorial integrity (6 percent), dealing with terrorism (5 percent), and protecting overseas Filipino workers (5 percent).
Pulse Asia pointed out that public opinion regarding urgent national concerns is “virtually constant” between September 2023 and December 2023.
“The only urgent national concern cited across all geographic areas and socio-economic groupings is controlling inflation (69 percent to 75 percent and 61 percent to 81 percent, respectively),” Pulse Asia said.
“On the other hand, the least often-cited urgent national concerns in these subgroupings are defending national territorial integrity (2 percent to 9 percent and 4 percent to 9 percent, respectively), dealing with terrorism (3 percent to 7 percent and 1 percent to 6 percent, respectively), and protecting the welfare of overseas Filipino workers (3 percent to 7 percent and 4 percent to 9 percent, respectively),” it added.