Fuel Tax Holds, Local Burdens Rise: Data Shows Deepening Strain in Davao and Across Mindanao

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DAVAO CITY (April 15) — The national government’s decision to retain fuel excise taxes comes as both fuel prices and inflation accelerate, amplifying pressure on Mindanao’s local economies and exposing the limits of localized responses to a global energy shock.

While officials in Malacañang warn of a ₱43.6 billion revenue loss if taxes are suspended, recent data suggests that the economic burden on the ground is already escalating—particularly in regions like Davao City.

Fuel Prices: Sharp, Sustained Increases

Recent Department of Energy monitoring shows fuel prices rising at one of the steepest rates in recent years.

  • Diesel prices have surged to as high as ₱95 to ₱114 per liter, depending on location
  • Gasoline prices have climbed up to around ₱91 per liter

In March 2026 alone, diesel prices increased by as much as ₱20–₱23 per liter, while gasoline rose by ₱12–₱16 per liter in a single adjustment cycle .

On a broader scale, national gasoline prices jumped from $0.98/L in February to $1.52/L in March 2026, reflecting the speed of the spike.

For Mindanao, where fuel must often be transported over longer distances, these increases are magnified at the retail level.

Inflation: Fuel Costs Spilling Into Everyday Life

The impact is now visible in inflation data.

  • National inflation rose to 4.1% in March 2026, breaching the government’s target range
  • Transport costs alone surged nearly 10% year-on-year, driven largely by fuel prices

In Davao, early signs of spillover are already evident:

  • Vendors report rising operating costs, with some considering scaling back or stopping operations amid sustained price increases
  • Fuel and transport costs have historically been key drivers of regional inflation, contributing significantly to price increases in goods and services

The pattern is clear: fuel price shocks are no longer isolated—they are feeding directly into food prices, transport fares, and market goods.

Ground-Level Impact: Compounding Pressures

For sectors in Mindanao, the numbers translate into daily trade-offs:

  • Transport operators face shrinking margins as diesel costs rise faster than fare adjustments
  • Farmers in Bukidnon absorb higher hauling and input costs before passing them on
  • Fisherfolk along the Davao Gulf spend more fuel per trip, reducing net income

In Davao’s public markets, even modest price increases accumulate weekly, steadily eroding household purchasing power.

LGU Response: Active but Constrained

Across Mindanao, local governments are responding—but data suggests they are reacting to pressures rather than controlling them.

  • Provinces are activating energy contingency plans and monitoring supply chains
  • The Bangsamoro Oil Crisis Impact Task Force has been tasked with cushioning price impacts in vulnerable areas
  • Cities like Davao are exploring targeted subsidies and transport support

Yet these measures are unfolding against rising baseline costs.

Fuel-driven inflation increases LGU operating expenses—from garbage collection to emergency services—tightening already limited budgets.

A Structural Squeeze

  1. Rapid fuel price escalation driven by global supply shocks
  2. Inflation spillover into transport and food systems
  3. Policy rigidity at the national level, with excise taxes maintained

The result is a downward shift in burden:

  • National government protects fiscal space
  • LGUs stretch limited resources
  • Households absorb rising daily costs

Beyond Short-Term Fixes

The data points to a deeper structural issue: Mindanao’s vulnerability to fuel shocks is not just about prices—it is about dependence.

With limited alternative transport systems, long supply chains, and heavy reliance on diesel, each price increase reverberates more intensely across the region.

As global volatility continues, the question is no longer whether prices will rise—but how long local systems can keep absorbing the impact without broader policy intervention.

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