
Marcos Net Satisfaction Rating Improves — But Still in Negative Territory
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. saw a slight improvement in his net satisfaction rating, rising from –5 to –3, according to the latest survey results reported by GMA Super Radyo Davao.
At first glance, the numbers show movement in a positive direction. But the bigger picture reveals a more complicated reality: the rating remains negative.
What Does “Net Satisfaction” Mean?
Net satisfaction is calculated by subtracting the percentage of dissatisfied respondents from satisfied ones.
So when a rating moves:
From –5
To –3
It means fewer people are dissatisfied — but dissatisfaction still outweighs satisfaction overall.
In short: it’s an improvement, but not yet a recovery.
Why This Matters
Public satisfaction ratings often reflect:
• Economic sentiment
• Inflation concerns
• Public service delivery
• Political controversies
• National security issues
With ongoing debates about the economy, budget deficits, flood-control investigations, and West Philippine Sea tensions, survey shifts are closely watched.
A two-point increase may signal:
• Stabilizing perception
• Reduced backlash
• Temporary political consolidation
• Or simply statistical fluctuation
But staying in negative territory suggests public confidence remains fragile.
The Political Context
The administration has recently emphasized:
• Anti-corruption messaging
• Fiscal discipline
• Infrastructure transparency
• Sovereignty assertions
However, public perception often moves slower than policy announcements.
Trust is rebuilt not through statements — but through consistent outcomes.
The Economic Factor
Surveys consistently show that economic conditions are the biggest driver of presidential approval.
Concerns include:
• High food prices
• Budget shortfalls
• Revenue collection gaps
• Employment stability
If economic pressures persist, even small rating gains can reverse quickly.
What Happens Next?
Political analysts will watch three indicators:
Whether the rating continues to improve.
Whether satisfaction crosses into positive territory.
How regional breakdowns compare nationwide.
A move from –5 to –3 is a signal.
But it is not yet momentum.
Final Thought
In politics, numbers tell stories.
This one says:
There’s slight improvement — but the public is still cautious.
The real test is not whether ratings move by two points.
It’s whether policies translate into felt improvements in everyday Filipino life.