From 1994 to 2006, the average household saving rate in the Philippines
declined by 5.2 percentage points to about a mere 5% of disposable income.
Using data from income and expenditure survey at the household level, this
paper explains why households’ consumption growth had been higher than
income growth during this period. Tracing cohorts shows that saving declined across all demographic groups. A simple test that provides the strength of the precautionary saving motive yields a plausible explanation that households are financially constrained and less prudent in the recent years. This paper argues
that these patterns are best explained by the extended coverage of social
security system during the 1990s in the Philippines. Less prudent behavior
may have been amplified by the severe financial constraint leading to the
sharp fall in the saving rate.