More news about how the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines is being handled by the public and the government.
The Asian Development Bank says the fuel crisis won't impact the Philippine economy has hard as the pandemic.
| https://mb.com.ph/2026/05/07/oil-shock-wont-hit-philippines-as-hard-as-covid-19-say-adb-economists |
Amid comparisons by some local firms claiming that the ongoing oil crisis triggered by the conflict in the Middle East is hurting their business operations more severely than the Covid-19 pandemic, economists from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said the broader Philippine economy is unlikely to suffer a shock as deep as the country’s worst post-war recession in 2020.
ADB chief economist Albert F. Park told a media briefing last Wednesday, May 6, that the Manila-based multilateral lender’s latest downgrade in regional growth forecasts remained far less severe than the economic collapse experienced during the pandemic.
Last month, the ADB downgraded its 2026 Philippine gross domestic product (GDP) growth forecast to a post-pandemic low of 4.4 percent, matching last year’s flood-control scandal-weakened expansion, while raising its inflation projection to a possibly 18-year high of 6.3 percent.“The perspective of private-sector [companies] could be different. But at the economy-wide level, we don’t think it would be the same level of shock,” Park said.
Park explained that the Covid-19 crisis disrupted both supply and demand simultaneously, unlike the current oil-driven shock stemming from geopolitical tensions due to the war in Iran.
At the height of the most stringent pandemic lockdowns, “people are not spending, people are not going out—so it’s hugely disruptive. And I don’t think we’re seeing that” now, he pointed out.
“There’s still quite a lot of robust domestic demand in many countries in the region,” he added.
Still, Park acknowledged that persistently elevated oil and food prices would create significant challenges for both households and businesses, especially firms heavily reliant on fuel inputs.
“This is certainly a headwind. Because if oil prices are high and later food prices are higher, then that’s more money [consumers] have to spend on those things—less money they have to spend on other things in the economy,” Park said.
He noted that such pressures could not only weaken consumer demand but also raise production costs for private firms.
For his part, ADB deputy chief economist Abdul Abiad said the ongoing oil crisis, “even under a more severe scenario,” would be unlikely to trigger a contraction comparable to the Philippines’ economic collapse at the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, when annual GDP shrank by 9.5 percent in 2020.
For Abiad, the two crises’ shocks “are very different.”In this current global oil price and supply crisis, “a lot of what will be felt will actually be on the inflation side rather than real activity,” he explained. Philippine inflation already surged to a 37-month high of 7.2 percent in April.
“The other difference is that you had that sharp contraction in 2020, and then you had a quick bounce back” as the domestic economy gradually reopened from pandemic restrictions, he added.“It’s hard to say how this Middle East conflict would evolve—it could get worse, but it’s difficult to compare. But definitely, in terms of just the shock to real activity, you’re not going to get something as big as that Covid shock in 2020,” Abiad said.
So, it could get worse but it might not. But it could.
Economic growth has hit a new post-pandemic low.
| https://business.inquirer.net/589015/philippine-gdp-growth-slows-to-2-8-in-first-quarter |
The local economy grew at a slower pace of 2.8 percent in the first quarter as the oil shock from the Middle East war added to pressures from a major infrastructure graft scandal.
The first-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) growth, which the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Thursday, further weakened from 3-percent expansion in the fourth quarter of 2025.
The figure landed below the government’s 5 percent to 6 percent target for 2026 and also slumped from the 5.4 percent GDP expansion seen in the same period a year earlier.
It likewise missed the 3.4 percent median estimate of 14 economists polled by the Inquirer.
The main contributors to the first quarter 2026 year-on-year growth were:
- Wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles, 4.6 percent;
- Financial and insurance activities, 3.4 percent; and
- Public administration and defense; compulsory social security, 8.6 percent.
Among the major economic sectors, services grew by 4.5 percent in the first quarter. On the other hand, the agriculture and industry sectors declined by 0.2 percent and 0.1 percent, respectively.
This outcome has now dragged the Philippines economy deeper into one of its weakest runs in 16 years outside the COVID-19 pandemic period.The country had still been trying to rebound from weak growth in 2025, when infrastructure spending contracted sharply amid the fallout from the flood control corruption scandal, which weighed on both government disbursements and business sentiment.
But in March—the last month of the quarter and the first month of the ongoing Middle East war—an energy shock began to bite, driving up fuel costs and pressuring household purchasing power and business confidence.
It appears the pandemic will remain the weakest economic run but remember, it could get worse.
The ASEAN is meeting in Cebu this month and they are looking to strengthen "regional healthcare cooperation and building more resilient public health systems amid growing health and pandemic threats across Southeast Asia."
| https://mb.com.ph/2026/05/10/asean-pushes-stronger-regional-healthcare-ai-driven-health-systems-amid-pandemic-threats |
The 11 leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening regional healthcare cooperation and building more resilient public health systems amid growing health and pandemic threats across Southeast Asia.
In the Chair’s Statement of the 48th ASEAN Summit in Cebu, the leaders emphasized the importance of ensuring universal access to essential health services and accelerating the adoption of digital health systems across the region.
They said ASEAN remains committed to “building a healthier, more resilient, inclusive, and sustainable ASEAN Community” through stronger regional coordination on healthcare and disease response.
The leaders also highlighted the need to address child malnutrition and improve immunization efforts, while enhancing the region’s preparedness and response to outbreaks, pandemics, and emerging health challenges.
Public health emergencies
ASEAN leaders acknowledged the region’s vulnerability to public health threats, including pandemics, disease outbreaks, and natural disasters.
“We reaffirmed our resolve to strengthen regional health security through a coordinated, whole-of-ASEAN approach,” the Chair’s Statement read.
The leaders said ASEAN would work to improve prevention, preparedness, detection, and response systems for future health emergencies.
They also welcomed the planned establishment and operationalization of the ASEAN Centre for Public Health Emergencies and Emerging Diseases (ACPHEED), which will serve as a regional hub for surveillance, research, training, and information exchange.
According to the statement, the center aims to strengthen the region’s preparedness and response capabilities during future public health crises.
ASEAN leaders also underscored the importance of strengthening Emergency Operations Centers and the ASEAN EOC Network to improve information sharing and regional coordination during emergencies.
AI, digital health
The leaders also recognized the growing role of artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare delivery and public health management.
They said AI could help improve diagnostics, imaging, surgical care, patient monitoring, therapeutics, rehabilitation, healthcare operations, and public health systems.
The bloc also expressed support for the ASEAN Health Sector’s digital health and health information systems initiatives as part of broader efforts to modernize healthcare systems across the region.
Earlier in the statement, ASEAN leaders also emphasized the role of AI and emerging technologies in supporting health services and improving regional resilience.
What's the next pandemic? Hantavirus?
There has been a post-pandemic hiking boom across the Philippines. It has not been great for the environment.
| https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1274712 |
Interest in communing with nature surged following the pandemic, as more people sought ways to ease worries and pressures brought about by movement restrictions and the challenges that followed.
Camping and hiking were among the activities that gained more enthusiasts, benefiting the local tourism industry.
One of the beneficiaries is the municipality of Barlig in Mountain Province, which recorded a total of 10,529 visitors across its four tourism areas in 2025 alone.
The municipality is home to Mt. Amuyao, one of the highest peaks in the Philippines with an elevation of around 2,702 meters above sea level, which attracted 1,135 tourists last year. The Macalana Rice Terraces also drew 1,135 visitors, while Lake Tufob welcomed 1,064 tourists and the Eagle View Deck logged 7,195 visitors.
In the first quarter of this year alone, around 2,900 tourists visited the municipality’s destinations.
While this is seen as a positive development for tourism, problems arise when undisciplined visitors leave waste behind or improperly dispose of trash in these areas.
In an interview with the Philippine News Agency, Queenie Martinez Francisco, a mountaineering fundamentals training provider who holds a Leave No Trace (LNT) training certification from the United States, said hiking became increasingly popular after pandemic movement restrictions were lifted.
She said hiking became one of the outlets people turned to “for fitness and mental health, amplified by social media exposure.”
“This growth has brought both benefits and challenges to local communities, generating income through tourism, tour-guiding, and small businesses, but also causing issues like overcrowding, environmental damage, and disrespect of local culture due to irresponsible hikers,” she said.
“To address this, the government can implement stricter permit systems, limit daily visitor capacity, require environmental orientation or accreditation for hikers, enforce penalties for violations, and work closely with local communities to ensure sustainable tourism practices that protect both the natural sites and the people who depend on them,” she added.
Leave No Trace
Francisco emphasized the importance of personal knowledge and preparedness when going to the mountains.
She underscored the need for Leave No Trace (LNT) or basic mountaineering course (BMC) training before starting a hiking or mountaineering journey, noting that “most accidents in the mountains happen because of lack of knowledge, (resulting in) getting lost, dehydration, injuries, or making poor decisions during sudden weather changes.”
“Through training, you learn essential skills like navigation, proper pacing, emergency response, and basic first aid, all of which are critical in real outdoor situations,” Francisco said.
“Training also emphasize environmental responsibility by teaching principles such as Leave No Trace, proper waste management, and respect for nature and local communities. At the same time, it builds teamwork and leadership skills, which are essential since hiking often involves group dynamics, communication, and shared responsibility.”
Francisco, who provides BMC training at a popular sports store in the country, said such training benefits not only tourism sites but hikers themselves by equipping them with the necessary mountain skills.
“Mountaineering training is not just for serious climbers, it is for anyone who plans to hike regularly and wants to do it safely, responsibly, and with confidence,” she said.
“Most importantly, it gives you real confidence, not the kind that relies on guesswork, but one (that is) grounded in knowledge and preparation. In the end, joining mountaineering training is not about being ‘extra,’ but about being prepared, minimizing risks, and fully enjoying the mountains the right way,” she added.
How hard is it not to litter? How hard is it to to adequately prepare by bringing proper supplies and looking at a map? Apparently very hard.