Tuesday, May 19, 2026

When Hard Work Is No Longer Enough

THERE ARE DAYS when an ordinary Filipino wakes up before sunrise, works the entire day, comes home exhausted, and still goes to sleep worrying about money.

Not because he refuses to work hard, but because life has become painfully expensive even for those who try to do everything right.

For many Filipinos today, hard work no longer guarantees stability.

FORCED TO CONTINUE

Every morning, millions of Filipinos endure long lines, heavy traffic, crowded trains, and exhausting commutes just to earn a living. Some leave home before daylight and return when their children are already asleep.

Construction workers spend hours under the heat of the sun for wages that quickly disappear after paying bills. Office employees render overtime but still count every peso before the next payday. Delivery riders brave rain, traffic, and danger daily because missing even one day of work means losing income their families depend on.

Many Filipinos quietly carry the same frustration: “Why does it feel like my efforts are never enough?”

A father skips meals so his child can bring baon to school. A mother says she is not hungry so the younger ones can eat first. Young professionals with decent salaries still cannot afford a home of their own. Even small business owners struggle with rising electricity costs, rent, fuel, and basic commodities.

Perhaps the most painful reality today is that many Filipinos are no longer chasing luxury or wealth. They simply want a life where hard work is enough to live with dignity.

For many families, survival itself has become the goal.

‘Despite everything, ordinary Filipinos continue moving forward … These ordinary citizens quietly carry this country every single day. They deserve more than praise for their resilience.’

MORE THAN HUNGER

The hardest part of poverty is not hunger alone.

It is the feeling that no matter how honest or hardworking you are, life barely moves forward.

Senior citizens continue working because retirement is no longer realistic. It is watching parents borrow money just to buy medicine. It is hearing students quietly consider stopping their studies so they can help support the family.

Over time, exhaustion becomes normal.

That is the silent burden many ordinary Filipinos carry every single day.

WHAT THE LAW PROMISES

The 1987 Constitution recognizes the dignity of labor and mandates the State to promote social justice. Article XIII expressly provides that workers are entitled to protection and humane conditions of work.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized that social justice is not meant to favor the privileged few, but to protect those who have less in life.

Yet for many Filipinos, these protections often feel distant from everyday reality.

Workers fear losing their jobs if they complain. Farmers continue struggling despite feeding the nation. Fisherfolk battle rising fuel prices while large commercial interests dominate resources. Small entrepreneurs are buried under permits, taxes, and operational costs before they even earn a profit.

The law exists. But people eventually lose faith when they no longer feel its presence in their daily lives.

FILIPINO RESILIENCE 

Filipinos are resilient. We have proven that time and again.

But resilience should never become an excuse for government inaction.

A nation cannot continuously praise hardworking citizens while leaving them trapped in a cycle where salaries remain low and the cost of living continues to rise.

If meaningful change is truly the goal, policies must go beyond temporary ayuda and political slogans.

Government support must become more practical and less bureaucratic. Small businesses should have easier access to low-interest financing and simplified permit processes. Wage earners need stronger protection against abusive labor practices and unfair working conditions.

Public transportation modernization must accelerate because transportation expenses quietly consume a significant portion of workers’ incomes every single day. Affordable housing programs should also become genuinely accessible to ordinary employees, not only to those who already have financial advantages or connections.

At the same time, stricter monitoring against price manipulation and anti-competitive practices is necessary to protect consumers from unreasonable increases in basic goods and commodities.

Most importantly, government programs should focus on restoring dignity to work — so that an honest day’s labor can once again provide a decent life for a family.

That should be the bare minimum in a decent society.

MOVING FORWARD 

Despite everything, ordinary Filipinos continue moving forward.

The tricycle driver still says “ingat po.” The sari-sari store owner still allows neighbors to buy on credit. Workers continue showing up despite exhaustion because their families depend on them.

These ordinary citizens quietly carry this country every single day.

They deserve more than praise for their resilience.

They deserve fairness, opportunity, and a government that genuinely understands their struggles.

Because a country cannot truly progress when the very people keeping it alive are barely surviving themselves.

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Mark Bacsain, ESQ
Mark Bacsain, ESQ
Atty. Mark Bacsain is a lawyer and public administration professional committed to advancing accountable governance and the rule of law. With a Master in Public Administration, he brings a policy-oriented perspective to legal issues, offering clear and grounded insights on law, current affairs, and governance, with a focus on how the law affects—and should serve—the everyday lives of Filipinos.