Philippines The Economy
Modern high-rise buildings of Makati business district
overlook residential area of Manila.
THE PHILIPPINE ECONOMY EXPERIENCED considerable difficulty in the 1980s.
Real gross national product
(GNP--see Glossary)
grew at an annual average of
only 1.8 percent, less than the 2.5 percent rate of population
increase. The US$668 GNP per capita income in 1990 was below the
1978 level, and approximately 50 percent of the population lived
below the poverty line. The 1988 unemployment rate of 8.3 percent
(12.3 percent in urban areas) peaked at 11.4 percent in early
1989, and the underemployment rate, particularly acute for poor,
less-educated, and elderly people, was approximately twice that
of unemployment. In 1988, about 470,000 Filipinos left the
country to work abroad in contract jobs or as merchant seamen.
The economy had grown at a relatively high average annual
rate of 6.4 percent during the 1970s, financed in large part by
foreign-currency borrowing. External indebtedness grew from $2.3
billion in 1970 to $24.4 billion in 1983, much of which was owed
to transnational commercial banks.
In the early 1980s, the economy began to run into difficulty
because of the declining world market for Philippine exports,
trouble in borrowing on the international capital market, and a
domestic financial scandal. The problem was compounded by the
excesses of President Ferdinand E. Marcos's regime and the
bailing out by government-owned financial institutions of firms
owned by those close to the president that encountered financial
difficulties. In 1983 the country descended into a political and
economic crisis in the aftermath of the assassination of Marcos's
chief rival, former Senator Benigno Aquino, and circumstances had
not improved when Marcos fled the country in February 1986.
Economic growth revived in 1986 under the new president,
Corazon C. Aquino, reaching 6.7 percent in 1988. But in 1988 the
economy once again began to encounter difficulties. The trade
deficit and the government budget deficit were of particular
concern. In 1990 the economy continued to experience
difficulties, a situation exacerbated by several natural
disasters, and growth declined to 3 percent.
The structure of the economy evolved slowly over time. The
agricultural sector in 1990 accounted for 23 percent of GNP and
slightly more than 45 percent of the work force. About 33 percent
of output came from industry, which employed about 15 percent of
the work force. The manufacturing subsector had developed rapidly
during the 1950s, but then it leveled off and did not increase
its share of either output or employment. In 1990, 24 percent of
GNP and 12 percent of employment were derived from manufacturing.
The services sector, a residual employer, increased its share of
the work force from about 25 percent in 1960 to 40 percent in
1990. In 1990 services accounted for 44 percent of GNP.
The Philippines is rich in natural resources. Land planted in
rice and corn accounted for about 50 percent of the 4.5 million
hectares of field crops in 1990. Another 25 percent of the
cultivated area was taken up by coconuts, a major export crop.
Sugarcane, pineapples, and Cavendish bananas also were important
earners of foreign exchange. Forest reserves have been
extensively exploited to the point of serious depletion.
Archipelagic Philippines is surrounded by a vast aquatic resource
base. In 1990 fish and other seafood from the surrounding seas
provided more than half the protein consumed by the average
Filipino household. The Philippines also had vast mineral
deposits. In 1988 the country was the world's tenth largest
producer of copper, the sixth largest producer of chromium, and
the ninth largest producer of gold. The country's only nickel
mining company was expected to resume operation in 1991 and again
produce large quantities of that metal. Petroleum exploration
continued but discoveries were minimal, and the country was
required to import most of its oil.
Prior to 1970, Philippine exports consisted mainly of
agricultural or mineral products in raw or minimally processed
form. In the 1970s, the country began to export manufactured
commodities, especially garments and electronic components, and
the prices of some traditional exports declined. By 1988
nontraditional exports comprised 75 percent of the total value of
goods shipped abroad.
Data as of June 1991
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