PRESENT Bill is key in ending poverty in Ph

We call on Congress to put into good use its remaining time and have the Poverty Reduction through Social Entrepreneurship (PRESENT) Bill passed, a demand for action by the PRESENT Coalition, a formation of social enterprise organizations convened by the Ateneo School of Government (ASoG) and the Foundation for a Sustainable Society (FSSI).

The call was a reiteration by the PRESENT Coalition during the Saturday Kapihan Forum at Anabels in Quezon City as the group marked the International Day of Poverty Eradication.

The United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Summit in New York City recently adopted 17 new global goals which prompted social enterprises in the Philippines to call its government to put poverty at zero rates by fast-tracking the passage of the PRESENT Bill.

“We should not let the poor wait any further to provide the support that they need,” said Jay Bertram Lacsamana, executive director of FSSI and co-convener of the PRESENT Coalition.

 

The  Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is a set of universal agenda critical in ending poverty, fighting inequality and protecting the environment across nations, adding that the integration of goals hinge on people, planet, prosperity, peace, and partnership will set a world where ‘No one is left behind’.

The SDGs succeeded the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and is consisted of 17 goals and 169 targets serving as blueprint for 193 member states to the United Nations in order to work for in the next 15 years or from 2015 to 2030.

First of the goals is poverty eradication with other important goals on gender equality, climate change, decent employment, inequality, and justice which were absent in the MDGs.

Under the SDGs, governments are encouraged to support policies promoting the growth and financial access of micro-small-and medium-sized enterprises in their respective countries.

Coop-NATCCCO Party-List Rep. Cresente Paez said: “We are pushing for the passage of the PRESENT Bill under the Aquino administration because we believe that social enterprise is actually the best model for achieving poverty eradication and inclusive growth.”

In the 2014 country report of the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA), achievement in poverty reduction is dismal from the country’s target for MDGS. Poverty incidence declined from 34.4 percent to 25.2 percent from 1991 to 2012 despite the MDG target of 17.2 percent by 2015.

The rate of poverty reduction has also been slow for the period of 2006 to 2012 with an over-all reduction of only 1.4 percent in six (6) year time.

Representative Paez, who is also the principal author of the PRESENT Bill, underscored that “social enterprises can be instrumental in transforming communities out from poverty through provision of goods, services, and opportunities and which can enable these sectors to take part in economic activities.”

According to FSSI, social enterprises are mission-driven organizations that seek to benefit the poor and marginalized such as farmers, fishers, persons with disabilities, indigenous peoples, and women, among the various sectors in society.

Social enterprises contribute to development by plowing back profit gathered from economic activities into community initiatives that will uplift the lives of those in the marginalized thereby attaining targets that fight poverty.

Data from the Institute for Social Entrepreneurship in Asia reveal that there are more than 30,000 social enterprises that are seen to benefit 2.5 million poor Filipinos if support mechanisms are available for social enterprises.

“With the potential of social enterprises in bringing development that is felt by the poor, we call the government to fast-track the legislation of the PRESENT Bill to influence the strategies it will employ in adopting the SDGs,” said Ms. Lisa Dacanay, president of the Institute for Social Entrepreneurship in Asia (ISEA).

Currently, the National Anti-Poverty Commission (NAPC) and the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) have identified social entrepreneurship as an anti-poverty strategy.

The PRESENT Bill seeks to grow more social enterprises by supporting major economic subsectors with the most number of poor.

The legislation is significant for social enterprises for it aims to empower the poor by giving them proper avenues where they can start and scale-up their social enterprises through loans, funds for research and development, preferential procurement for social enterprises, linkage to value chain and market, trainings and capacity-building activities, and insurance for social enterprises in times of disasters.

The Senate version of the bill is filed by Sen. Benigno ‘Bam’ Aquino III. The bill is now waiting for second reading in both houses.

The bill is also supported by the PRESENT Coalition, an alliance of various social enterprise practitioners, advocates, NGOs, and the academe who have joined together to lobby the passage into law of the bill.

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