The agency, then known as POPCOM, was created in 1969 by virtue of Executive Order (EO) 171 which established a 22-member Commission on Population. Republic Act 6365, or the Population Act of the Philippines, was enacted into law by the Philippine Congress on August 16, 1971, which established the National Population Policy. The agency was mandated in 1972 by Presidential Decree 79, or the Revised Population Act of the Philippines, to be the central policy-making, planning, coordinating and monitoring agency for the Philippine Population Management Program (PPMP). Before the actual creation of POPCOM, then-president of the Philippines
Ferdinand Marcos, together with 17 other heads of state, signed in December 1967 the
United Nations Declaration on Population, which stated: “The population problem must be recognized as a principal element in long-range planning if governments are to achieve their economic goals and fulfill the aspirations of their people." In 1970 the Ad Hoc Commission on Population, created the year prior, recommended the launch of the National Population Program through EO 233. Toward the next decade, POPCOM was listed as an attached agency to the
Department of Social Welfare and Development by virtue of EO 123 in 1986. In 1990, EO 48, as directed by then-chief executive
Corazon Aquino, placed POPCOM under the Office of the President in order to “facilitate coordination of policies and programs relative to population.” The following year, EO 476 made POPCOM an attached agency of the NEDA. In 1993, POPCOM adopted the PPMP, as well as the Population, Resources and Environment Framework by the administration of ex-Philippine president
Fidel V. Ramos. The regime of then-Philippine president
Joseph Estrada reformulated the PPMP, with responsible parenthood as its cornerstone. In 2003, then-president
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo issued EO 188, which transferred POPCOM under the
Department of Health (DOH). Under her administration, Arroyo joined the community of nations in expressing support for the
International Conference on Population and Development, or ICPD. The statement reiterated the four principles that guide the Philippine government in the implementation of its population program: responsible parenthood, respect for life, birth spacing and informed choices. Health services, including those for reproductive health, were devolved by the Local Government Code to the
local government units (LGUs). On December 13, 2018, former Philippine president
Rodrigo Duterte signed Executive Order No. 71. Section 1 of the said law orders the commission's reattachment to NEDA for policy and program direction, as well as renames it as the "Commission on Population and Development." In mid-2023, the agency's Board of Directors approved its rebranding to the proper and appropriate acronym: "CPD." According to Bersales, the change in shortened name captures the commission's focus on "human capital development" which complements its core functions of reproductive health, responsible parenthood and family planning. == Programs and projects ==