What’s Really Behind the “24.8 Million Functionally Illiterate Filipinos” Story

The PSA’s new literacy standard revealed a deeper truth: reading isn’t enough if the meaning gets lost along the way.

The number shocked many in November 2025: 24.8 million Filipinos are functionally illiterate.

But before believing the worst, it helps to look at what that figure truly means—and what quietly changed behind it.

While many reports highlighted “24.8 million Filipinos” to sound alarming, the PSA actually presented it as a percentage—70.8% functional literacy. The number only looks huge because it covers the entire population aged 10 to 64. In truth, the focus is not the count, but the rate of comprehension.

Some reports turned that percentage into population figures to grab attention. Based on PSA data, the literacy rate of 70.8% covers about 81 million Filipinos aged 10 to 64. That means roughly 23 to 25 million still struggle with comprehension—not because they can’t read, but because understanding remains a challenge.

The New Definition

In 2024, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) released the latest Functional Literacy, Education and Mass Media Survey (FLEMMS).
This survey redefined what it means to be “functionally literate.”

Old rule: If you finished at least four years of high school, you were automatically counted as functionally literate, even if your comprehension wasn’t tested.

New rule: You must prove you can read, write, compute, and understand what you read. That last word—understand—changed everything.

Because of this stricter measure, the percentage dropped from roughly 91 % in 2019 to about 71 % in 2024. It’s not a national collapse—it’s a tougher, more accurate test.

What the Number Really Means

The 24.8 million refers to Filipinos aged 10 to 64 who can read and write basic text but struggle with comprehension or applying what they learn in daily life.

They’re not “illiterate” in the usual sense—they’re functionally limited.

This gap matters: It affects how people follow instructions, manage finances, or even vote with full understanding of what they read.

The Reporting Problem

The issue resurfaced in November 2025, when new headlines claimed “millions of high-school graduates can’t read.”

That’s misleading. The PSA clarified that the 24.8 million figure includes everyone in the 10-64 age group, not just graduates.

The dramatic tone came from comparing the new 2024 definition with old-method data. Once you know the difference, the “crisis” looks exaggerated.

Why It Still Matters

Even if the headlines overreacted, the concern remains real. Too many Filipinos can read words but not meaning—a quiet problem that affects jobs, learning, and daily life.

Lawmakers and educators are now using the 2024 survey to push for stronger reading-comprehension programs and better teacher support.

The Real Message

This isn’t a story of failure—it’s progress in honesty.

The Philippines isn’t losing readers—it’s finally measuring literacy for what it truly is: the ability to understand.

The headlines should have read: “Around 24.8 million Filipinos aged 10 to 64 can read and write but struggle to fully understand or apply what they read, based on the PSA’s 2024 literacy survey.”

Reading without understanding builds noise. Understanding builds a nation.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Rising Unemployment in the Philippines: A Shared Weight

Unemployment climbs to its highest in years—revealing not just lost jobs but a burden shared by all.

The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), through its July 2025 Labor Force Survey, reports a hard truth—unemployment rose to 5.3%, equal to 2.59 million Filipinos without work. In June it was only 3.7%. This is now the highest rate since August 2022.

By PSA’s definition, the unemployed are those aged 15 and above who had no work during the survey week, were available for work, and were either looking for a job or waiting to start one.

Typhoons and heavy rains triggered the spike, shutting down jobs in agriculture, fishing, construction, and retail. But the storms only exposed what has long been weak: training that doesn’t match market needs, small businesses with little support, and workers left unprotected when crises hit.

The Weight Behind the Numbers

Unemployment is not just a statistic. It means lost income, dreams on hold, and families under stress. If ignored, it deepens the divide between those who can keep moving forward and those left behind.

Government and People: Both Have a Hand

⚖️ What Government Must Do

• Strengthen education, training, infrastructure, and business support
• Provide safety nets so families don’t collapse after a job loss
• Prepare for disasters, because storms here are a certainty, not a surprise

👤 What People Must Do

• Gain skills that fit real job demand, especially technical and digital
• Accept stepping-stone jobs instead of waiting for the “perfect” role
• Move away from unstable informal work when better options exist

🪢 Where It Connects

It’s not only the government, and it’s not only the individual. Programs fail if people refuse to adapt. Workers suffer if the government fails to plan. Both must act—together—or the problem will keep repeating.

The Road to Jobs

• Train workers for today’s needs—technical, digital, adaptable skills
• Launch big projects—roads, bridges, and energy systems that open jobs quickly
• Support small businesses—loans, tax breaks, and room to expand
• Link schools with companies so education matches job demand
• Cut red tape so businesses can hire faster
• Provide safety nets—benefits and retraining for displaced workers
• Grow the digital economy—better internet, more remote job chances
• Use accurate data to target areas with the highest job losses

The Way Forward

The July spike is both a warning and a chance. It shows what is broken, but also where to rebuild. With strong policies and willing workers, the Philippines can shape a workforce that survives crises and grows stronger.

Jobs are more than paychecks—they are stability and hope. Solving unemployment means building a future where every Filipino can work, stand tall, and live with security.

𝚃𝚢𝚙𝚒𝚗𝚐 𝙾𝚞𝚝 𝚘𝚏 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝙱𝚕𝚞𝚎 • 𝖽𝖺𝗋𝖾𝗆.𝗆𝗎𝗌𝗂𝖼.𝖻𝗅𝗈𝗀