The World Bank reclassified the Philippines as an upper-middle-income country effective July 1, 2026, based on a gross national income per capita of $4,850.
The reclassification came after nearly four decades in the lower-middle-income category. It reflects sustained growth in nominal national income that outpaced population growth, according to the World Bank's Atlas methodology.
The move coincides with political developments including the start of impeachment proceedings against Vice President Sara Duterte and plunder allegations against Senator Rodante Marcoleta. Business confidence metrics declined amid the uncertainty.
Analysts note that the statistical milestone does not eliminate poverty or inequality. Surveys showed 52 percent of families rating themselves poor in March 2026, while the Philippine Statistics Authority recorded a 22.4 percent poverty incidence in 2023.
The reclassification shifts the country's development focus toward productivity, innovation, and institutional quality rather than income statistics alone.