A palengke is a type of public market common throughout the Philippines.
A palengke is usually composed of several dozen stalls arranged in rows under a shared roof. Management is usually by the local governmental units whose jurisdiction encompasses the physical location of the markets. Certain pieces of legislation however, such as the Cooperatives Code (RA 7160) and the Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act (RA 8435) have prescribed that management of the markets be accomplished through cooperatives.[1] There is little control over the day-to-day management of individual stalls, including commodity pricing. This has resulted in what has been called "palengke mechanics". A cited example would be the price of chicken during the local 2007 holiday season; lack of demand for the product resulted in prices going up rather than down. It was stated that this was the result of local retailers raising prices to recover financial losses from low demand.[2] The Philippine government retains some control over the price of some commodities sold in palengkes, especially critical foods such as rice.[3] The National Food Authority calls this regulation campaign (specifically for rice), Palengke Watch.[4]
The concept has had its criticisms, citing several drawbacks. Palengkes have been described as sites where illicit electric taps and illegal water connections are rampant. In 2002, the Caloocan public market was described by city officials as unsanitary.[1] Some are known to use wells, some illegally constructed, as water sources leading to possibly unsanitary water conditions.[5] Another criticism of the traditional palengke is that it is an old concept that must make way for modern development; a Pasig City mayor once opined that the palengke was outdated.[6]
In recent years, the typical palengke has been supplanted by larger, more commercialized shopping centers. The rise of shopping malls and supermarkets have also been cited as threats to the old-school public markets. In a 2002 article, the president of the National Federation of Market Vendors Cooperatives, a cooperative of market vendors throughout the country, stated that the concept of the palengke was an integral part of Philippine culture. He stressed that the public market instilled a sense of community that was not evident in the more-commercialized shopping malls.[1] In spite of this, at least one traditional market has been renovated to appeal to more commercialized consumers. A specific case is the "Mutya ng Pasig Market" which was renovated in late 2008, from a traditional palengke into more of a shopping mall.[6]
The concept of the palengke is usually taken hand-in-hand with the concept of local poverty. Because of this, a few local politicians have used it in their nicknames, such as "Mr. Palengke" (or some iteration of it) to signify their affiliation with poverty.[7] Prominent local politician Mar Roxas used the nickname "Mr. Palengke" to his advantage, gaining a senate seat in the 2004 Philippine elections.[8]
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The word palengke is a local variant spelling of the Spanish word palenque, literally meaning "(wooden) palisade or stockade" and by extension the area enclosed by such a structure for defense, public festivals or some other purpose.[9] The Spanish word is also used to describe a pathway or cluster of tables set up at some place of gathering such as a theatre, tournament or market,[9] and it is from this latter sense that palengke likely derives its usage in the Filipino context. In the former Spanish colonies of New Spain in the Americas palenque also described a gathering-place of indios.[9] One false etymology for palengke/palenque appearing in some popular sources mistakenly presumes that palenque is instead a word from the indigenous Mayan languages of Mexico and Central America meaning "gathering place",[10][11] and that in colonial times the Spanish adopted it to describe a gathering of indigenous peoples.[10] While its use in Latin America to describe such a gathering is attested, the word itself originates from Spanish and not any of the indigenous languages. The mistaken belief of the word's indigenous origin is probably reinforced by the name of the well-known Maya archaeological site in Chiapas, Mexico—also called Palenque—which was named after the nearby Spanish village when the site was rediscovered in the mid-18th century.