INTRODUCTION
The recent performance of the Philippine economy poses a number of conundrums for analysts of growth and development. Regarded as the “sick man of Asia” since its mid-1980s debt crisis (Balisacan 2015), the country’s economic prospects until onset of the global COVID-19 pandemic have dramatically improved over the past decade, catapulting the economy to the ranks of Asia’s leading growth performers, and onto several lists of promising emerging economies such as Goldman Sachs’s “Next-Eleven”, Turner Investment Partners’ “TIMPs” (Turkey, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines), and Time magazine’s “PINEs” (Philippines, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Ethiopia). Nevertheless, parallel to this economic resurgence, deep-seated challenges of structural poverty and marginalization have persisted, with the country’s record in reducing poverty and inequality, generating quality employment, and promoting social mobility, having been disappointing. More troublingly, there is growing evidence that wealth inequality has risen, even while the social mobility prospects of most of the population have been hampered by entrenched forms of social and economic insecurity. These, in turn, have elicited concern from observers about the “exclusive” and even “oligarchic” character of the Philippine economy, which have yet to be decisively tackled by policymakers and the country’s political leadership (Habito 2012; Teehankee 2017).
Underlying these dynamics are political and economic systems that in the case of the Philippines have undergone extended transformations over the past few decades. In line with growing concern on rising domestic inequalities as well as entrenched obstacles towards achieving inclusive growth (Albert, Dumagan and Martinez 2015; Albert and Raymundo 2015), this chapter aims to situate inequality trends in the country amidst transformations in the Philippines’ political economy since the return to democracy in the mid-1980s—focusing on the contribution of structural and institutional change on the distribution of wealth and incomes, as well as social mobility. Starting with an overview of these transformations in the next section, we survey more specific trends in inequality and exclusion, and examine the factors that have driven such processes. In so doing, we stress the underlying political economy constraints that have impeded significant advances in the Philippines’ efforts to address inequality and exclusion, and attest to how incoherencies in the country’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic are linked to these structural issues.