27/05/2026
To Capiz GenZ: While some criticisms contain valid points, they can oversimplify a much more complex development issue.
Capiz, like many provinces in the Philippines, remains largely agriculture and fisheries dependent. This is shaped not only by local governance, but also by national development patternsโwhere industrial and high-value economic activity remains concentrated in major urban centers.
Over time, there have been improvements in infrastructure, public services, and urban development, especially in areas like Roxas City, though challenges remain in expanding higher-value industries and long-term economic opportunities.
Industrialization depends on multiple factors beyond politics alone, including infrastructure, logistics, energy, market access, and national investment policy.
In this sense, Capizโs economic structure reflects both local and structural limitations within the broader Philippine development model, which has led to uneven regional growth.
had to edit it since it's long๐ฌ
For many years, Capiz has produced and continues to produce a remarkable number of powerful politicians, including a President of the Philippines. But the province is still stuck in poverty and lack of progress. For generations, its powerful politicians used their influence not to build lasting industries, advanced healthcare, or stable jobs but to distribute short-term aid and political favors. But it never built the productive assets such as irrigation, cold storage, industrial zones, and vocational schools that would allow Capiz to prosper without them.
The economy is overwhelmingly dependent on low-value, weather-sensitive crops like rice and sugarcane, alongside subsistence fishing, with no significant investment in irrigation, post-harvest facilities, or market access to boost incomes. In contrast, modernizing provinces elsewhere in the world invest in high-standard farmland with drip irrigation, drones, and smart systems for their agriculture-dependent economies. Those places build systems that generate sustainable incomeโfarmers becoming shareholders in collective enterprises, vocational training tied to actual jobs, land rights that let barangays attract investment, and training aligned with local industry needs.
Industrialization is virtually non-existent: there are no manufacturing zones, no tax incentives to attract investors, and no power infrastructure to support them. There are also no major manufacturing or processing zones, unlike in other places where rural collective land is used for industrial parks.
In short, Capiz is not poor despite its powerful politicians; it is poor because those politicians overlook the long-term work of building infrastructure, education, and economic resilience.