Fuel-Driven Price Shock: Caraga Region Inflation Surges to 5.5% in March

Date:

Share post:

Photo: PSA Caraga

BUTUAN CITY (April 15) — Inflation in the Caraga Region surged to 5.5% in March, up sharply from 3.6% in February, with fuel costs triggering a chain reaction across transport, food, and household expenses.

Data from the Philippine Statistics Authority shows the spike was overwhelmingly driven by transport, which accounted for 52.3% of total inflation pressure.

Fuel Prices at the Core

The numbers reveal a dramatic turnaround:

  • Gasoline inflation: from -4.4% → 27.8%
  • Diesel inflation: from 0.5% → 59.9%
  • Transport inflation overall: from 0.8% → 11.9%

This reflects how quickly global oil shocks are filtering into local economies—especially in regions like Caraga, where mobility depends heavily on fuel.

Food Inflation Follows

The second major driver—food and non-alcoholic beverages (40.6%)—shows how fuel costs cascade into daily living:

  • Rice: from -1.8% → 5.3%
  • Eggplant: from -2.7% → 24.0%
  • Squash and gourds: from 10.7% → 24.0%

Transport costs for farm goods are pushing prices upward, tightening supply chains and raising market prices.

Regional Disparities Widen

Inflation impact varied across provinces:

  • Dinagat Islands — 7.7% (highest)
  • Butuan City — 7.3%
  • Agusan del Norte — 6.7%
  • Surigao del Norte — 5.3%
  • Agusan del Sur — 4.5% (lowest)

The variation reflects differences in geography, supply access, and local economic resilience.

A Familiar Pattern: Fuel → Transport → Food

The data underscores a now-familiar inflation chain:

Fuel price shock → higher transport costs → rising food prices → broader cost-of-living increase

For Caraga, a region with dispersed communities and long travel routes, this chain reaction is particularly strong.

Policy Tension in Focus

The surge comes as the national government maintains fuel excise taxes, arguing that suspending them would result in massive revenue losses.

But Caraga’s data highlights the tradeoff:

  • preserving fiscal revenue at the national level
  • while regional economies absorb accelerating costs

What Comes Next

If fuel prices remain elevated, inflation in Caraga may persist or even rise further—especially if transport and food costs continue to climb.

For households, this means shrinking purchasing power.

For local governments, rising service costs.


For policymakers, intensifying pressure to balance revenue stability with economic relief.

spot_img

Related articles

US oil depot talk stirs Davao, but MinDA says no notice

DAVAO CITY (April 17) — The Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA) clarified that it has received no formal communication...

SSS rolls out ₱60B aid, moves up pension increase

MANILA (April 17) — The Social Security System (SSS) is rolling out a sweeping package of loan relief...

Mindanao revives 50:50 energy mix goal as fuel volatility bites

DAVAO CITY (April 17) — A renewed push to rebalance Mindanao’s energy mix is gaining traction, with planners...

Davao del Sur towns mobilize ₱70-M energy relief, tighten accountability amid fuel crisis

STA. CRUZ, Davao del Sur (April 17) — Local governments in Davao del Sur have earmarked up to...