Advertisement

Filipinos more concerned about inflation and jobs as Marcos Jnr focuses more on South China Sea, survey finds

  • Almost 70 per cent of Filipino respondents in a survey said Congress should focus immediately on curbing rising commodity prices
  • Filipinos were more concerned about economic issues than foreign policy issues such as the South China Sea, according to the firm behind the survey

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
10
A vendor waits for customers inside his stall at a market in Quezon City, the Philippines. Photo: Xinhua
Filipinos were more concerned about inflation and other economic issues such as poverty and unemployment, reflecting public expectations of President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr to fulfil his election manifesto even as he directed his focus on tensions in the South China Sea, according to a survey.
Advertisement

Philippine-based independent polling firm WR Numero told This Week in Asia its findings also showed the Philippine public was “not a foreign-policy-type of population” and that its demands of the president were no different than other elected public officials.

The report published on April 3 found that seven in 10, or nearly 70 per cent of 1,500 respondents said the Philippine Congress should focus immediately on rising commodity prices. About 52.7 per cent of those polled said lawmakers should prioritise hunger and poverty while 50.3 per cent cited the lack of jobs and opportunities as their key concerns, according to the survey.

Only 14 per cent of respondents said Congress should focus on China’s aggression in the West Philippine Sea.

Other issues such as rising criminality and more illegal drug users – both of which were prevalent during the previous administration under strongman Rodrigo Duterte – were at 22 per cent and 27 per cent, respectively.

The survey was conducted between November and December last year.

Advertisement