The edge of ‘Imperial Manila’

OUR COMPATRIOTS from Mindanao and the Visayas have long complained of Metro Manila’s undue dominance in setting the country’s directions, and how its residents possess a clear advantage over their counterparts in the countryside. One key economic statistic showing this is the inflation rate. In the first half of this year, prices outside of Metro Manila have risen three times faster (1.5 percent over the levels a year ago) than in Metro Manila itself (0.5 percent). Are government initiatives to help consumers cope with rising prices (e.g., via various subsidy schemes) biased for Metro Manila residents? The numbers would appear to suggest so.

This is of course only one of the various manifestations of what southerners have long lamented about what they have come to call “Imperial Manila,” which also include a lopsided share of the infrastructure budget. It’s the principle of “the squeaky wheel gets the grease”: Political noises have always been much louder in Metro Manila than in the provinces. And Metro Manila, based on Commission on Elections data, accounts for 6.3 million out of the country’s 54.4 million registered voters, comprising nearly 12 percent, or about one-eighth, of the total. This is about the share of Metro Manilans to the total population as well. And yet, Metro Manila only accounts for a miniscule 0.2 percent of our total land area. But its population density of 19,137 persons per square kilometer is about 62 times the national density of only 308.

Metro Manila’s advantage vis-à-vis the countryside goes well beyond having much slower price inflation and getting much more budget for infrastructure than the latter. Well over one-third (36.5 percent) of the country’s total incomes (measured by GDP) are earned in Metro Manila, which also accounts for nearly half of the growth in total incomes. Business tax revenues from countryside operations of firms operating nationally also tend to get collected in Metro Manila where the companies’ headquarters are located, mostly in Makati City. (And that’s among the reasons so many things can be given free to Makati residents, including birthday cakes for seniors.) That we have a highly Metro-Manila-centric economy is already obvious from those figures.

And there’s much more. Though somewhat dated, some data from the 2007 edition of the government publication “The Philippine Countryside in Figures” provide further indications of the bias for the National Capital Region. Some highlights:

Metro Manila is not favored in everything, though. In some indicators, Metro Manilans are worse off relative to provincianos:

Change is here, however. Now that we have a “Mindanao triumvirate” in the President, Senate President and House Speaker, we are likely to see a deliberate effort to move us away from this Metro-Manila-based bias. And given the need for our economy to be more inclusive in both the sectoral and geographic sense, it’s high time we did so.

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