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Philippines population bill a waste of resources: think tank
Time is GMT + 8 hours
Posted: 2-Oct-2008 20:59 hrs
A health worker (L) examines a mother to see if she is fit to take birth control pills at a UN-sponsored Population Day in Manila in July 2008. A bill seeking to impose population control in the country is a waste of valuable resources that would be better ploughed into education and infrastructure, a conservative think-tank has said.
 
 
A bill seeking to impose population control in the Philippines is a waste of valuable resources that would be better ploughed into education and infrastructure, a conservative think-tank said Thursday.
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The proposed law comes at a time when countries that adopted similar policies in the 1970s are reversing them as they start to worry about supporting their ageing populations, said the economists at Manila-based University of Asia and the Pacific.
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Its chief economist Bernardo Villegas said controlling the population would be "demographic suicide," and would put the blame for widespread Philippine poverty with "people who are not yet even born".
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The bill is about 12 votes shy of passing the House of Representatives, according to its principal author and House member Edcel Lagman.
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However, it lacks the support of President Gloria Arroyo, a devout Roman Catholic who could theoretically veto it even if passed by the House and the Senate. Lagman said a dozen previous population bills over the past generation had been defeated.
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The dominant Catholic church has threatened to excommunicate legislators who vote for the bill.
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Under the proposed law the state would have to fund a population programme, teach it at schools and to couples intending to marry and have government hospitals offer contraceptives, vasectomies and tubal ligations, an operation that blocks the fallopian tubes.
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It would require the state to "encourage two children as the ideal family size".
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The Philippines has among the highest birth rates in Asia, with the population growing at around two percent annually and expected to top 100 million in five years.
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Villegas told reporters solving poverty that binds a third of the population required improving the quality of basic education, curbing corruption and devoting state resources to developing the countryside, where the largest concentrations of poor live.
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"The greatest impact of your peso is in educating women," said Roberto de Vera, another economist at the same school.
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Villegas said international studies showed the growth of per capita income was related to school enrolment rates rather than population control.
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"Countries with higher human capital also have lower fertility rates," he added.
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Contrary to popular convention, he said the fertility rate of Filipino women had fallen from six children in 1975 to fewer than three.
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Even without state intervention, the Philippine population would peak at 111 million in 2025, with a maximum population density of just 370 people per square kilometre (0.39 square miles), he added. — AFP

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