3.7. Community-Driven Program - KALAHI - CIDSS
3.7. Community-Driven Program - KALAHI - CIDSS
3.7. Community-Driven Program - KALAHI - CIDSS
conditions and poor water supply, which accounts for 69% of the distributed of
funds for subprojects.
Fiscal Impact
Local governments were responsive to the local counterpart funding requirement of
the projects with 84% allotting 50% of their development fund. However, the midterm contributions declined by phase 2, probably due to the uncertainties over the
release of the IRA.
The counterpart contributions of the LGUs, communities and private sources
accounted for 35% of total project costs with the community counterpart comprising
of 9.5% of the total project costs.
Cost efficiency of subprojects
The unit cost of small infrastructure subprojects are lower than those of government
agencies with the cost difference ranging from 8% for school buildings to 76% for
water supply projects due to savings from contractors profits (15%-20% of the
cost), 10% VAT and costs for right of way.
3.8. Assistance to Persons with Special Vulnerabilities
DSWD provides social assistance to groups with special vulnerabilities through
residential and non-residential centers and community-based services. It currently
operate 41 residential facilities for children that provides (1) psychosocial services,
(2) temporary shelter, and (3) protection, care, treatment and rehabilitation services
for those recovering from substance abuse and exploitation and those with
behavioural problems and in conflict with the law. It also provides 3 homes for
senior citizens, 1 for abandoned and neglected children with special needs and
another as a halfway home for females recovering from mental illnesses and a
temporary shelter for strandees, vagrants and mendicants.
DSWD also operates 7 non-residential facilities for clients with families or those
undergoing developmental activities, some of which also provide vocational/ social
rehabilitation and skills training for persons with disabilities and psychosocial
support for bereaved mothers for grief management.
DSWD provides programs to mobilize the family and the community to provide the
following services for those who are in need or at risk:
Child Protective Services, Therapy Services for Abused Children, Alternative
Family Care, Travel Clearance to Minors and Special Social Services for
Children in Armed Conflict.
Such services are also provided for older persons in the form of enhancing the
caregiving capacity of the family e.g. training of volunteers as resource persons on
the proper care of older persons. Another program would be the Sheltered
Workshop for Persons with Disabilities that provide training and employment for
PWDs such producing and selling goods or services.
DSWD Php 543 million for 2007 and Php 730 million for 2008 for social assistance to
persons with special vulnerabilities; however, such assistance are non-targeted and
with the employment rate increasing to 47%. In 2007, the costs of the dropouts
were Php 35 million with the unemployment rate costing Php 568 million.
While the BPO sector has the lowest dropout rate (20%) and highest employability
(51%), it is still much lower than the first target of 90%.
4.2. Special Program for the Employment of Students (SPES)
Key Features Students are paid 60% of the prevailing minimum wage while DOLE
gives them the remaining 40% in the form of vouchers with the period not less than
15days nor more than 45 days during the summer and not less than 10 days but not
more than 15 days during Christmas vacations.
Coverage It is open to all students whose parents combined net income does not
exceed Php 36,000 per annum. Employers must have minimum of 50 employees to
participate in SPES.
Effectiveness While SPES was able to place 65% of its applicants, it is only 2.3% to
3.2% of the poor population aged 15-24 years old. The verification of the net
income of the parents appears to be weak, being based only on income tax returns.
The income provided per year is generous, representing 17% to 42% of the cut-off
household income.
4.3. Work Appreciation Program (WAP)
Coverage Those 18 years old to 25 years old, unemployed and physically fit to
undertake the apprenticeship program are eligible only once a year for a maximum
period of 3 months. Any entity willing to provide training opportunities and willing to
pay up to 75% of the minimum wage as qualified to participate as employers, as
long as the trainees comprise not more than 10% of the workforce
Effectiveness The placement rate was 81% of the applicants but covered only
0.03% to 0.07%of those aged 18-25 years old.
Critique The stipend of WAP is less than those of SPES. Very few employers are
willing to shoulder the full cost of the stipends while others may exploit the workers
at a pay rate of less than 25%.
4.4. Employment Facilitation and Job Search Assitance
DOLE, through the Public Employment Service Offices (PESOs), provides
employment facilitation and placement assistance services to reduce the
transaction cost of job search. PESO is a community based and maintained largely
by LGUs, NGOs, or community-based organizations and state universities and
colleges.
PESOs provide various job search assistance services e.g. access to Phil-JOBNET,
matching, referral and placement services. PESO enjoys a placement rate of 65% to
67% which represent 2% of the total employment and 20% to 23% of those who are
unemployed.
will participate in the program and that they will voluntarily drop out of the program
when the labor market improves and better paying jobs becomes available.
A workfare program will be self-targeting but the cost-effectiveness of the workfare
program has been found to vary with the quality of the assets created in terms of
the degree to which said assets enhance the productivity of the local community in
the future and the extent to which the poor actually benefit from them. Although
the list of eligible projects include productive infrastructure project, it is the lessproductive activities tend to capture a bigger share of the budgetary resources
allocated to the program. There should be a complementary program that will
support local communities as they articulate their demand and put increased
pressure on LGUs and the national government to improve the supply of needed
basic services and synergies could also harnessed when workfare projects are
implemented as the greater participation of the local community in the
identification of projects will help ensure that the projects selected are those that
are most valuable to the community.
Expanding the coverage of the Sponsored Program of PhilHealth and improving the
selection of beneficiaries are critical for two reasons. First, PhilHealth provides the
poor financial protection against illness. Second, achieving universal coverage of
PhilHealth supports the health sector reform agenda and make the health system, in
general, and the public hospital system, in particular, more sustainable.There are
indications that some of the so-called poor households who are currently enrolled in
the program are not poor, bringing the undercoverage rate up to 50% or more. As a
result, poor households which are not covered under the Sponsored Program have
no recourse but to go to the no-pay wards of government hospitals and/ or line up
for emergency assistance at the DSWD/ LGUs. At present, proposals for the national
government to shoulder 100% of the premium contributions for indigents and for
LGUs to take care of partially subsidizing the informal sector appear to be in the
right and will eliminate the political economy issues associated with the present
practice of LGUs identifying the beneficiaries under Sponsored Program. These
proposals also appear to be consistent with the current practice in a number of
LGUs which ask the enrolled beneficiaries in the Sponsored Program to co-share the
premium contribution.
A common theme that emerges from the assessment of the different social safety
net programs above is the importance of a good targeting system in enhancing
program effectiveness. Admittedly, the institutionalization of the proxy means test
does not come cheap. However, if the same proxy means test is used in selecting
the beneficiaries then the investment in the targeting system could be costeffective. At present, the leakage rate is estimated to be 24% at best.
Recently, in the wake of the global financial and economic crisis and the ensuing
rise in the unemployment rate, there is renewed interest on the introduction of
unemployment insurance in the country. It is argued that unemployment insurance
is not feasible because (i) the share of the informal sector is high (roughly 50% of
employed persons are in the informal sector), (ii) both unemployment and
underemployment are high, ranging from 7% to 8% and 19% to 26%, respectively,
in the last 5 years, (iii) the proportion of the poor among the unemployed is low in
relative terms (e.g., in 1997 only 12% of the unemployed are poor but the overall
poverty incidence is 25%), and (iv) administrative capacity to monitor the
employment status and job search behavior is weak. Given these conditions,
unemployment insurance will tend to create inefficiencies and dis-incentives.
Esguerra et al. (2002) notes that by imposing contributions to be levied on wages,
the cost of labor may increase, contributing to the further growth of the informal
sector and the increase of the equilibrium level of unemployment. By intensifying
job search and prolonging unemployment spells, unemployment insurance tends to
increase the unemployment rate.