Thanks to an FB link posted by an FB friend, I was able to view a very recent BBC documentary that featured London bus driver Josh West head to Manila, the world’s most densely populated city, where, with his host Rogelio Castro, he braves the chaos of the streets in a Jeepney.
Two bus drivers, both have “big” families – but live different lives. It shows nearly two weeks in the day of a life of a Filipino jeepney driver – and the community he belongs to, the neighborhood he once belonged to, his plans for the future. All recorded under the watchful cameras of the BBC.
Unfortunately BBC cannot operate their own media corporation in the Philippines because the Philippine Congress and the Philippine constitution does not allow BBC to operate in the Philippines – supposedly as a threat to “national security”. Given the Philippines state of affairs – I’d say the Philippine media is a bigger threat to “national security”.
ABS-CBN can make or unmake politicans and presidencies, even manufature a revolution. Without the competition from independent media such as the ones provided by BBC, we can’t expect to have independent confirmation by 3rd party sources – as well as alternative points of view. Filipinos deserve to be told the stark naked truth – not the gyrations of near naked bimbos on the latest wowowee variant.
25 Years after EDSA, this is what life means to Manila’s jeepney drivers.
Observations – Work in Progress
02/26/2011, Saturday, 8:06am US EST
Individual Qualitative Benchmarks
Josh West, London – large family, bus driver, middle class.
Rogelio Castro, Manila – large family, bus driver, poor.
City Benchmarks
London
The region covers an area of 1,579 square kilometres. The population density is 4,761 people per square kilometre, more than ten times that of any other British region. In terms of population, London is the 25th largest city and the 17th largest metropolitan region in the world. It is also ranked 4th in the world in number of US dollar billionaires residing in the city. London ranks as one of the most expensive cities in the world, alongside Tokyo and Moscow.
Manila
It’s the most densely populated city in the world with 43,079 inhabitants per km2.[5] District 6 is listed as being the most dense with 68,266 inhabitants per km2, followed by the first two districts with 64,936 and 64,710, respectively, and district 5 being the least dense with 19,235.[28]
Manila’s population density dwarfs that of Kolkata (27,774 inhabitants per km2), Mumbai (22,937 inhabitants per km2), Paris (20,164 inhabitants per km2), Dhaka (19,447 inhabitants per km2), Shanghai (16,364 inhabitants per km2), with its most dense district of Nanshi’s 56,785 density), and Tokyo (10,087 inhabitants per km2).[29]
But when accounting for the entire urban area, Metro Manila drops to 60th place with 14,100 people/km2 in a land area of 1,425 km2, which includes the area of Greater Manila Area.[4]
World Cities by Population Density
Largest cities in the world ranked by population density (1 to 125)
Rank | City / Urban area | Country | Population | Land area (in sqKm) | Density (people per sqKm) |
1 | Mumbai | India | 14,350,000 | 484 | 29,650 |
2 | Kolkata | India | 12,700,000 | 531 | 23,900 |
3 | Karachi | Pakistan | 9,800,000 | 518 | 18,900 |
4 | Lagos | Nigeria | 13,400,000 | 738 | 18,150 |
5 | Shenzhen | China | 8,000,000 | 466 | 17,150 |
6 | Seoul/Incheon | South Korea | 17,500,000 | 1,049 | 16,700 |
7 | Taipei | Taiwan | 5,700,000 | 376 | 15,200 |
8 | Chennai | India | 5,950,000 | 414 | 14,350 |
9 | Bogota | Colombia | 7,000,000 | 518 | 13,500 |
10 | Shanghai | China | 10,000,000 | 746 | 13,400 |
11 | Lima | Peru | 7,000,000 | 596 | 11,750 |
12 | Beijing | China | 8,614,000 | 748 | 11,500 |
13 | Delhi | India | 14,300,000 | 1,295 | 11,050 |
14 | Kinshasa | Congo | 5,000,000 | 469 | 10,650 |
15 | Manila | Philippines | 14,750,000 | 1,399 | 10,550 |
16 | Tehran | Iran | 7,250,000 | 686 | 10,550 |
17 | Jakarta | Indonesia | 14,250,000 | 1,360 | 10,500 |
18 | Tianjin | China | 4,750,000 | 453 | 10,500 |
19 | Bangalore | India | 5,400,000 | 534 | 10,100 |
20 | Ho Chi Minh City | Vietnam | 4,900,000 | 518 | 9,450 |
21 | Cairo | Egypt | 12,200,000 | 1,295 | 9,400 |
22 | Baghdad | Iraq | 5,500,000 | 596 | 9,250 |
23 | Shenyang | China | 4,200,000 | 453 | 9,250 |
24 | Hyderabad | India | 5,300,000 | 583 | 9,100 |
25 | Sao Paulo | Brazil | 17,700,000 | 1,968 | 9,000 |
26 | St Petersburg | Russia | 5,300,000 | 622 | 8,550 |
27 | Mexico City | Mexico | 17,400,000 | 2,072 | 8,400 |
28 | Santiago | Chile | 5,425,000 | 648 | 8,400 |
29 | Singapore | Singapore | 4,000,000 | 479 | 8,350 |
30 | Lahore | Pakistan | 5,100,000 | 622 | 8,200 |
31 | Recife | Brazil | 3,025,000 | 376 | 8,050 |
32 | Istanbul | Turkey | 9,000,000 | 1,166 | 7,700 |
33 | Dalian | China | 2,750,000 | 389 | 7,100 |
34 | Khartoum | Sudan | 4,000,000 | 583 | 6,850 |
35 | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | 10,800,000 | 1,580 | 6,850 |
36 | Monterey | Mexico | 3,200,000 | 479 | 6,700 |
37 | Bangkok | Thailand | 6,500,000 | 1,010 | 6,450 |
38 | Osaka/Kobe/Kyoto | Japan | 16,425,000 | 2,564 | 6,400 |
39 | Guadalajara | Mexico | 3,500,000 | 596 | 5,900 |
40 | Athens | Greece | 3,685,000 | 684 | 5,400 |
41 | Ankara | Turkey | 3,100,000 | 583 | 5,300 |
42 | Madrid | Spain | 4,900,000 | 945 | 5,200 |
43 | London | UK | 8,278,000 | 1,623 | 5,100 |
44 | Tel Aviv | Israel | 2,300,000 | 453 | 5,050 |
45 | Sapporo | Japan | 2,075,000 | 414 | 5,000 |
46 | Buenos Aires | Argentina | 11,200,000 | 2,266 | 4,950 |
47 | Moscow | Russia | 10,500,000 | 2,150 | 4,900 |
48 | Barcelona | Spain | 3,900,000 | 803 | 4,850 |
49 | Porto Alegre | Brazil | 2,800,000 | 583 | 4,800 |
50 | Tokyo/Yokohama | Japan | 33,200,000 | 6,993 | 4,750 |
51 | Belo Horizonte | Brazil | 4,000,000 | 868 | 4,600 |
52 | Fortaleza | Brazil | 2,650,000 | 583 | 4,550 |
53 | Warsaw | Poland | 2,000,000 | 466 | 4,300 |
54 | Tashkent | Uzbekistan | 2,200,000 | 531 | 4,150 |
55 | Naples | Italy | 2,400,000 | 583 | 4,100 |
56 | Katowice | Poland | 2,200,000 | 544 | 4,050 |
57 | Leeds/Bradford | UK | 1,499,000 | 370 | 4,050 |
58 | Manchester | UK | 2,245,000 | 558 | 4,000 |
59 | CapeTown | South Africa | 2,700,000 | 686 | 3,950 |
60 | Fukuoka | Japan | 2,150,000 | 544 | 3,950 |
61 | Taichung | Taiwan | 2,000,000 | 510 | 3,900 |
62 | Baku/Sumqayit | Azerbaijan | 2,100,000 | 544 | 3,850 |
63 | Curitiba | Brazil | 2,500,000 | 648 | 3,850 |
64 | Birmingham | UK | 2,284,000 | 600 | 3,800 |
65 | Berlin | Germany | 3,675,000 | 984 | 3,750 |
66 | Riyadh | Saudi Arabia | 4,000,000 | 1,101 | 3,650 |
67 | Campinas | Brazil | 1,750,000 | 492 | 3,550 |
68 | Jeddah | Saudi Arabia | 2,750,000 | 777 | 3,550 |
69 | Paris | France | 9,645,000 | 2,723 | 3,550 |
70 | Durban | South Africa | 2,900,000 | 829 | 3,500 |
71 | Vienna | Austria | 1,550,000 | 453 | 3,400 |
72 | Accra | Ghana | 1,500,000 | 453 | 3,300 |
73 | Glasgow | UK | 1,200,000 | 368 | 3,250 |
74 | Nagoya | Japan | 9,000,000 | 2,875 | 3,150 |
75 | Quito | Ecuador | 1,500,000 | 479 | 3,150 |
76 | Donetsk | Ukraine | 1,400,000 | 451 | 3,100 |
77 | Goiania | Brazil | 1,475,000 | 479 | 3,100 |
78 | Munich | Germany | 1,600,000 | 518 | 3,100 |
79 | Stuttgart | Germany | 1,250,000 | 414 | 3,000 |
80 | Dublin | Ireland | 1,075,000 | 365 | 2,950 |
81 | Kuwait | Kuwait | 1,600,000 | 544 | 2,950 |
82 | Nizhni Novgorod | Russia | 1,500,000 | 505 | 2,950 |
83 | Rome | Italy | 2,500,000 | 842 | 2,950 |
84 | Phnom Phen | Cambodia | 1,500,000 | 518 | 2,900 |
85 | Beirut | Lebanon | 1,800,000 | 648 | 2,800 |
86 | Brasilia | Brazil | 1,625,000 | 583 | 2,800 |
87 | Essen/Düsseldorf | Germany | 7,350,000 | 2,642 | 2,800 |
88 | Lumumbashi | Congo | 1,200,000 | 427 | 2,800 |
89 | Kuala Lumpur | Malaysia | 4,400,000 | 1,606 | 2,750 |
90 | Los Angeles | USA | 11,789,000 | 4,320 | 2,750 |
91 | Milan | Italy | 4,250,000 | 1,554 | 2,750 |
92 | Pretoria | South Africa | 1,850,000 | 673 | 2,750 |
93 | Stockholm | Sweden | 1,400,000 | 518 | 2,700 |
94 | Turin | Italy | 1,350,000 | 500 | 2,700 |
95 | Dubai | UAE | 1,900,000 | 712 | 2,650 |
96 | Porto | Portugal | 1,035,000 | 389 | 2,650 |
97 | Toronto | Canada | 4,367,000 | 1,655 | 2,650 |
98 | Budapest | Hungary | 1,800,000 | 702 | 2,550 |
99 | Lisbon | Portugal | 2,250,000 | 881 | 2,550 |
100 | Johannesburg/East Rand | South Africa | 6,000,000 | 2,396 | 2,500 |
101 | Rotterdam | Netherlands | 1,325,000 | 531 | 2,500 |
102 | Harare | Zimbabwe | 1,750,000 | 712 | 2,450 |
103 | Cologne/Bonn | Germany | 1,960,000 | 816 | 2,400 |
104 | San Francisco/Oakland | USA | 3,229,000 | 1,365 | 2,350 |
105 | Frankfurt | Germany | 2,260,000 | 984 | 2,300 |
106 | Hamburg | Germany | 1,925,000 | 829 | 2,300 |
107 | San Jose | USA | 1,538,000 | 674 | 2,300 |
108 | Arabia | Saudi | 1,525,000 | 673 | 2,250 |
109 | Brussels | Belgium | 1,570,000 | 712 | 2,200 |
110 | Lille | France | 1,050,000 | 474 | 2,200 |
111 | Helsinki | Finland | 1,000,000 | 479 | 2,100 |
112 | Port Elizabeth | South Africa | 900,000 | 427 | 2,100 |
113 | Sydney | Australia | 3,502,000 | 1,687 | 2,100 |
114 | New York | USA | 17,800,000 | 8,683 | 2,050 |
115 | Auckland | New Zealand | 1,050,000 | 531 | 2,000 |
116 | New Orleans | USA | 1,009,000 | 512 | 1,950 |
117 | Copenhagen | Denmark | 1,525,000 | 816 | 1,850 |
118 | Montreal. | Canada | 3,216,000 | 1,740 | 1,850 |
119 | Honolulu | USA | 718,000 | 399 | 1,800 |
120 | Las Vegas | USA | 1,314,000 | 741 | 1,750 |
121 | Miami | USA | 4,919,000 | 2,891 | 1,700 |
122 | Ottawa/Hull | Canada | 828,000 | 490 | 1,700 |
123 | Vancouver | Canada | 1,830,000 | 1,120 | 1,650 |
124 | Antwerp | Belgium | 915,000 | 596 | 1,550 |
125 | Denver | USA | 1,985,000 | 1,292 | 1,550 |
Source: http://www.citymayors.com/statistics/largest-cities-density-125.html
All the cities with the highest population densities should be among the poorest in the world. A quick eyeball of the list without having to pull economic data tells me that the most populous cities in the world count among it – the most prosperous.
Overpopulation
It is often argued that overpopulation causes hunger. Therefore, to reduce hunger overpopulation needs to be addressed. The premise however is highly open to doubt.
http://www.globalissues.org/article/205/does-overpopulation-cause-hunger
Do too many people already cause hunger? If that were the case, then reducing population density might indeed alleviate hunger. But for one factor to cause another, the two must consistently occur together. Population density and hunger do not.
Hunger is not caused by too many people sharing the land. In the Central America and Caribbean region, for example, Trinidad and Tobago show the lowest percentage of stunted children under five and Guatemala the highest (almost twelve times greater); yet Trinidad and Tobago’s cropland per person-a key indicator of human population density-is less than half that of Guatemala’s.15 Costa Rica, with only half of Honduras’ cropped acres per person, boasts a life expectancy-one indicator of nutrition-eleven years longer than that of Honduras and close to that of northern countries.16
In Asia, South Korea has just under half the farmland per person found in Bangladesh, yet no one speaks of overcrowding causing hunger in South Korea.17
http://www.globalissues.org/article/206/poverty-and-population-growth-lessons-from-our-own-past
the link between hunger and high fertility rates: both persist where societies deny security and opportunity to the majority of their citizens-where infant-mortality rates are high and adequate land, jobs, education, health care, and old-age security are beyond the reach of most people, and where there are few opportunities for women to work outside the home.
Without resources to secure their future, people can rely only on their own families. Thus, when poor parents have lots of children, they are making a rational calculus for survival. High birth rates reflect people’s defensive reaction against enforced poverty. For those living at the margin of survival, children provide labor to augment meager family income. In Bangladesh, one study showed that even by the age of six a boy provides labor and/or income for the family. By the age of twelve, at the latest, he contributes more than he consumes.23
Population investigators tell us that the benefit children provide to their parents in most third world countries cannot be measured just by hours of labor or extra income. The intangibles are just as important. Bigger families carry more weight in community affairs. With no reliable channels for advancement in sight, parents may hope that the next child will be the one clever or lucky enough to get an education and land a city job despite the odds. In many countries, income from one such job in the city can support a whole family in the countryside.
And impoverished parents know that without children to care for them in old age, they will have nothing.24 They also realize that none of these possible benefits will be theirs unless they have many children, since hunger and lack of health care will kill many of their offspring before they reach adulthood. The World Health Organization has shown that both the actual death and the fear of death of a child will increase the fertility of a couple, regardless of income or family size.25
Finally, high birth rates may reflect not only the survival calculus of the poor, but the disproportionate powerlessness of women as well. Many women have little opportunity for pursuits outside the home, because of power relations internal to the family and/or in the larger society. Continued motherhood may then become their only “choice.”
Perhaps the best proof that the powerlessness of women can undergird high fertility comes from extensive research on the effect of women’s education. In one study after another, women’s education turns out to be a powerful predictor of lower fertility. As women’s schooling increases, fertility typically falls.26
Of course, we should guard against interpreting these findings literally-that what women learn is how to limit births. In fact, study after study has shown that people tend to have the number of children they want, regardless of whether more modern birth control methods are available or the government has a family planning program.27 Rather, the fact that women are getting educated reflects a multitude of changes in society that empower women and provide them with opportunities in the workplace.28
Epilogue
Other societies have leveraged population size and growth to fuel their prosperity, diversify the economy, innovate towards a sustainable lifestyle, provide more opportunities for prosperity, and improve the quality of life by pursuing sensible economic policies. The Philippines – however, is a textbook case in “How Not to Pursue National Development”.
Related Reads:
http://antipinoy.com/population-growth-birth-rate-death-rate-life-expectancy-of-filipinos-and-the-rh-bill/
http://antipinoy.com/revisiting-the-rh-bill-a-trojan-horse-for-increased-wasteful-public-spending/
http://badmannersgunclub.com/2011/02/misplaced-priorities/#more-1022
http://badmannersgunclub.com/2011/02/dissecting-the-rh-bill/
http://getrealphilippines.blogspot.com/2011/02/have-advocates-of-filipino-reproductive.html
Why they didn’t mention cebu and davao and other provinces, because manila is an exploited places where you see abias-cbn, gma, tv5 where people exploit from stupid shows like wowowee, eat bulaga, and other shows that doesn’t even educated you. but yayaman tayo dyan sa mga stupidong elitista na basta ginagawa nila prosti ang mga mahihirap basta sila lang kikita. wow when will ever learn all flippers that entertainment is not solution that’s why many filipinos are migrating other country para guminhawa ng buhay basta.
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“If the Leaders have no Visions; the People will Perish…” this is a qoute from the Christian Bible Old Testament.
Thanks for the Videos….it had shown the true situation of the Filipino people, for the Whole World to see. Our people are trapped in a grinding poverty…. Eating Food Scraps from the Garbage Dumps. People in the Provinces are tied to Hopeless Poverty Lives…there is no Hope for them, for better lives. Some escape from this situations, by working as OFW slaves in foreign countries.
While the: Political Leaders; the Oligarchs; the Feudal Lords; and other kinds of Exploiters; live in Luxuries; and Excessive Wealth…These are the Results of the EDSA Revolutions…
“PANIG SA KATOTOHANAN…PANIG SA BAYAN!!!”…a subliminal disinformation message inculcated in the Subconscious Minds of the unsuspecting Filipinos, by a prominent a Oligarchs’ Media…
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Thank you for the videos. Learned and enjoyed it very much. Thanks, AP.
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BongV Reply:
February 26th, 2011 at 5:25 pm
You are welcome. Glad you enjoyed the video.
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remember guys. Overpopulation as the main culprit of poverty was overestimated but don’t think that overpopulation isn’t a problem.
While food production can be multiply via technology. Resources cannot, it’s pretty much finite.
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BongV Reply:
February 26th, 2011 at 5:24 pm
adjustment can be made in terms of shifting to other resources or reducing consumption in combination with other resources (i.e. from rice to potatoes, from steam to coal to petrofuel to renewables plus good economics)
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migs42 Reply:
February 26th, 2011 at 6:40 pm
Until alternative energy resources became practical, you can’t really do anything.
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BongV Reply:
February 26th, 2011 at 6:49 pm
there’s a lot actually:
do you know that by unplugging the wall sockets every time you don’t need to use an appliance can reduce consumption substantially – that’s an adjustment in consumer behavior.
retrofitting buildings with green devices – there’s an initial capital outlay – but capital assets are recovered via utility savings in a year or two.
use of smart grids as well. of course the reaction of the coal and fossil driven power generators is akin to the reaction of the steam engine’s proponents when coal was just being introduced. when there’s a demand – the supply will be met.
the utilities forget they are on the supply side of the equation. the companies that step up to the demand of the market – are in for prosperous times.
Jay Reply:
February 26th, 2011 at 9:41 pm
The rice to potatoes shift is an interesting one. Kamoteng kahoy and sweet potatoes offer great and healthy alternatives as carbs compared to white rice, which been compared as unhealthy carbs to that of sugar. Brown and black rice are grown in the country, but are as expensive.
Though if even the supposed cheap fish, round scad gets anymore expensive, the people are going to have to look for even more cheaper alternatives.
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The one fear I have of allowing foreign news companies to operate here is that instead of quality news like the BBC or DW we might end up with Fox News. Filipinos love hype and xenophobia, and the FNC delivers it plenty. Doesn’t Reuters have a bureau in that new area near the AFP base at the Fort?
Also, how can the revitalization of metropolitan areas – including the removal of economic restrictions – be pursued WITHOUT further enticing the provincials to move to metropolitan areas and compromise the development? Modern agricultural technology means less people to do the same amount of work, so there’ll be fewer people needed out there.
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This is good. Can you imagine if all filipinos watch this documentary? Damn, baka mamaya magkaroon pa ng facebook revolution on charter change…..
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very informative mr. bongV! i think more than giving out free contraceptives, it’s important to educate people. the fact that a lot of the most progressive cities are also the most densely populated is an eye opener. thank you!
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