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By Vincent Cabreza, Kate Pedroso Inquirer
LPG shows poverty now wears a woman's face
First posted 04:27am (Mla time) Mar 09, 2006
POVERTY wears a woman's face.
Many households in Metro Manila cannot afford liquefied petroleum gas
(LPG) or cooking gas, according to a survey conducted by the Center
for Women's Studies (CWS).
Myrna, a government employee from Laguna province, now uses wood
instead of LPG if she has to boil meat -- a task that takes more time
and, therefore, consumes more fuel. That practice has allowed her to
extend her LPG consumption to two months from one and a half months.
Fe, a manicurist from Laguna, finds it cheaper to buy her family's
food from a nearby store. If she has to, she uses her LPG only for
frying. The current LPG tank she uses was bought last December.
Mary Jane Guan, CWS executive director, said on Tuesday that the
survey put a "woman's face" to the state of poverty in the country.
Speaking at a forum at the University of the Philippines Baguio, Guan
said 39 percent of 200 mothers that the CWS randomly surveyed in
January said they had abandoned LPG in favor of meals cooked over
charcoal.
This finding has been validated by an increase in demand for clay
stove burners in Metro Manila, she said. Other housewives in middle-
and low-income households have started using wood and kerosene.
Guan said that for women LPG was the most relevant indication that the
political crisis was the result of the actual economic condition and
not due to the political opposition.
The LPG Industry Association of the Philippines confirms that LPG
sales have gone down since last year.
"It started in May 2005 due to the continued price increase," said
Mercedita Pastrana, executive director of the LPG industry
association.
LPG prices, which hit the P500 level in mid-November last year, rose
to P552 per 11-kg cylinder in Metro Manila at the beginning of March
this year.
Currently, LPG is sold at P490 to P540 per 11-kg cylinder, an increase
of more than 100 percent from its price in the same period in 2002.
LPG sales drop
"We really felt the drop. Nowadays, LPG can sell for as high as P560.
We're living in tough times," said Bernardo Bolisay, president of the
LPG Refillers Association of the Philippines.
Bolisay noted a drop in sales, which he said started in November 2005
with the imposition of the 10-percent expanded value-added tax. The
VAT rate was raised to 12 percent last month.
In San Fernando City, Pampanga province, Best Gas Refilling Plant saw
a 30-percent drop in sales in February compared to the sales of the
same month last year, Bolisay said.
10-percent decline nationwide
Nationwide, the drop in LPG sales was about 10 percent, but the
decline was greater in the Visayas and Mindanao, where alternative
sources of energy abound, according to Pastrana.
She said consumers in Luzon may also have resorted to using kerosene
or even charcoal.
One can cook meals for the day with just P10 to P20 worth of kerosene.
"But if we compute that, spending P20 a day will amount to P600 a
month. A refill of an 11-kg LPG costs around P500," Pastrana said.
Because of the high cost of 11-kg LPG tanks, the Department of Energy
is encouraging suppliers to offer cooking gas in tanks with capacities
of as little as 1 kg. The small tanks will cost at a little more than
P60.
Bolisay noted that people were resorting to charcoal, firewood or even
coconut husk.
Peso's reduced purchasing power
Prices of basic goods and services rose by an average of 7.6 percent
in February, the highest in eight months.
Guan said President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's statements about a
strong peso masked the reduction in the peso's purchasing power from
79.2 centavos in January 2005 to 74.2 centavos in January.
Guan said Ms Arroyo "has been ecstatic" about the peso's strength and
the growth in portfolio investments.
But both indicators rely heavily on the health of the overseas
Filipino market, Guan said. Remittances by overseas Filipino workers
rose to $10.7 billion in 2005.
She said portfolio investments were not a reliable economic barometer
because they do not directly result in new jobs as they are not
injected into local industries.
These investments, according to Guan, are immediately withdrawn at the
slightest hint of instability.
Vincent Cabreza is a correspondent of PDI Northern Luzon Bureau, while
Kate Pedroso is from PDI Research
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