ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNER BOARD EXAM
Wednesday, May 28, 2008On 11-12 June 2008, the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) through the Board of Environmental Planning will hold the Professional Licensure Examinations for Environmental Planners. A new set of Environmental Planners will again be available for multi-million projects.
I can vividly remember that during our time, which was actually just two years ago, I was very excited to take the said examinations. I had just finished my Diploma course from the U.P. School of Urban and Regional Planning (UP-SURP- the only urban and regional planning school in the Philippines). I was so eager to practice Environmental Planning. No one can practice Environmental Planning in the Philippines without a license from the PRC. Fortunately (thanks to my prayers and my very capable professors from UP-SURP), I was able to survive the examinations despite me suffering from flu then. Unfortunately, one (1) out of the twelve (12) students/graduates from the UP-SURP who took the examinations failed.
I am the 574th licensed Environmental Planner in the Philippines. So far, considering the number of hopefuls that pass the EnP Board Exams every year, the Philippines has now have approximately 630 licensed Environmental Planners (this number includes those who have failed to renew their licenses).
One unsolicited advice for those who are going to take and successfully pass the EnP Board Exams this year- consider the profession as a vocation not a money-making business. I have heard a lot of stories from my colleagues that there are some who study Urban Planning and take the Board Exams just to be able to make money. It is true that an Environmental Planner can rake as much as a million per project (that is, if you have built a very good reputation as a Planner). However, the clients that badly need your service are not your multi-million real estate companies or your mutilateral agencies. The clients that badly need your service are your local government units, especially those categorized under the 3rd to 5th class categories.
As an Environmental Planner, I would like to request the other licensed Environmental Planners and those who are to be licensed soon to share your expertise to our local government units. If you can, at least, take a pro bono project once a year or once very two years. The proof that I practice what I preach is my Plan.Works Co. I, together with the EnP Board Exams topnotcher in 2006, established this planning firm that primarily caters to local government units who cannot even afford to send their Planning and Development Officers to take special planning courses in UP-SURP. However, inspite the pro bono service that we offer, some local government officials and officers are still hesitant to engage us because this would still entail expenses for materials and transportation.
To the EnP hopefuls this year, God bless and may you share your expertise to our needy clients.
is there a need to manage population growth?
Friday, February 15, 2008The debate on whether to control population growth or not stems not just from the conflict between the church and the state but more on whether rapid population growth is a hindrance to sustainable economic development or a factor promoting such. Sustainable economic development implies new concept of development jumping from mere figures to a wider concept of fairness and opportunity for all the people with regard to world’s finite natural resources and carrying capacity. One of the values of sustainability is life sustenance- the ability to provide needs. In this regard, several literatures about population management point to negative macro and micro implications of rapid population growth.
Macro Level Implications
Although population growth could be beneficial for developed countries with a population age structure which is almost rectangular (e.g.
On Natural Resources. Natural resources are viewed as inputs to production. More inputs will be needed to produce goods and services needed by the rapidly growing population. Although it might not be a problem if addressed adequately and timely, more labor applied to fixed land, for example, might lead to diminishing returns. According to some studies, if population grows rapidly and responses are not adapted on time, the population might not be able to avert declining labor productivity as a result of rapid growth (NEDA, 1993).
On environment. It has been viewed by many studies that rapid population growth worsens the degradation of the environment- destruction of forests, pollution, and exhaustion of resources among others. A slower population growth not only slows down environmental degradation but also gives more time to lay out mitigating measures (NEDA, 1993).
On capital. Population growth increases the dependency burden, that is, the age/sex structure of the population changes such that a larger population of the total population now belongs to the younger age group, implying that the greater the number of dependents, the greater the consumption out of a given income (NEDA, 1993). This leads to lesser savings, which are main sources of domestic investments, affecting the capacity of the population for investing in productive activities, thus resulting in a slower growth.
The negative effects of rapid population growth on physical capital formation are not so much as compared to the development of human capital. Less savings leads to lesser expenditures for health, education, and nutrition of the populace among others. For instance, countries with high population growth rate, such as the
On income inequality. Effects of population growth are apparent on wages and employment. Very rapid population growth rate leads to increase in the labor force. This could be a problem if the country’s economy could not absorb the rapid increase in the labor force. The more rapid increase in potential labor supply relative to increase in demand for labor would tend to depress the wage rates (Herrin, 1996).
Micro Level Implications
At the level of households, effects of population growth are felt on financial resource dilution. The dilution effect affects expenditures on education, employment of family members, and on savings.
On education. Pertinent to the investments to human capital, the capacity of households to support educational needs of their children is impeded as their size increases. Findings in the
Estimates suggest that the impact of younger children on the enrolment status of older siblings operates mainly through resource dilution in the case of older brothers and through increased household duties in the case of older sisters (Bauer, et al., 1992). Probably due to rigid gender roles in the
On employment. The more common effect of additional children in the household is to inhibit women from entering the labor market. According to a study, on the average, female participation declines by 60% in household with no income to 52% in those with one. This analysis suggested that an important cost of children is the earnings women forego because of childrearing responsibilities (Bauer, 1992). The presence of children were found to significantly reduce the chances that women will be an earner. This would lead to lesser income for the family to support the needs of its members. A slack in the supply of employment is also created when the labor force grows rapidly.
On savings. Childrearing also depresses the rate household savings as is the case in the
Epilogue
Population growth, according to Herrin (1996), has positive effects on promotion of economies of scale and on technological change. As population grows, the market increase in size to a point where economies of scale are possible and more efficient in provision of goods and services. As is the case with economies of scale, population growth also enhances technological change in the light of the need to adopt a more intensive system which increase outputs in order to address the need to growing requirements of the population.
However, in spite of the fact that population growth could be of advantage to developed countries, it might have adverse effects on developing countries especially to those whose resources and production could not adapt to the rapid population growth as shown in the discussions above on macro and micro-level implications of rapid population growth. Population size and structure have effects both on human and natural resources- the main components of sustainable economic development. In the Philippine setting where development is constrained by the inability of the government to finance development and serve even the minimum basic needs of the populace, rapid population growth would mean slower development.
The government is constrained by its resources to serve goods and services to the people such as education, health, and nutrition. The present fiscal situation of the
At the level of households, the inability of the family to meet basic needs as the number of children increases poses a major problem in human development. More often than not, larger family hampers the investment of family on education and nutrition due to dispersion of income to more members. These sacrifice the quality of future generation’s quality would not be favorable for the economy.
Population growth per se is not a problem. It would even be advantageous if the same level of resources and production growth accompanies it. The problem is the ability to support the needs of the growing population. Only when the government could support adequately the needs of the population and households could meet their basic needs that economic development could be sustained. In this light, it is of necessity that population be managed and planned. After all, the subject and object of planning and of development are the people.


