Skip to content
Metro Sun Daily

Metro Sun Daily

REAL NEWS * REAL TIME

  • Home
  • Nation
  • Metro
  • Regions
  • Global
  • Feature
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Sports
  • OFW
  • VP Sara Impeachment
  • Business

Econ managers push fuel tax relief, 20% MOOE cuts for oil prices

admin April 9, 2026

SPEAKER Faustino “Bojie” G. Speaker Faustino “Bojie” G. Dy III held a meeting on Wednesday where economic managers discussed options like possibly stopping or lowering fuel excise taxes and cutting non-essential maintenance and operating expenses (MOOE) by at least 20 percent, as a way to deal with rising oil prices that could increase inflation and slow down economic growth.

The policy options were shared during a meeting of 13 important committees in the Legislative Energy Action Development (LEAD) Council, which followed Speaker Dy’s guidance to ensure that immediate help and long-term changes match the government’s response to the changing global oil prices.

Officials from the Department of Finance (DOF), Department of Budget and Management (DBM), and Department of Economy, Planning and Development (DEPDev) said the administration’s response is anchored on a whole-of-government approach under President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr., combining targeted interventions, tax policy tools, and cost-reduction measures to protect households and critical sectors.

Finance Undersecretary Karlo Fermin Adriano said the government is prioritizing calibrated support over broad subsidies.

“The government must balance the urgent need to provide support to the most vulnerable sectors with the equally critical responsibility of maintaining fiscal discipline,” Adriano said.

He said economic managers have assessed options to ease fuel costs, including possible adjustments to petroleum excise taxes.

“The economic managers have undertaken rigorous assessment of the macroeconomic and fiscal implications of the crisis and have submitted recommendations to the President for the suspension or reduction of excise tax on fuel,” he said.

Adriano added that efforts are also focused on limiting the secondary impact of rising fuel prices by reducing logistics and transaction costs and supporting key sectors such as agriculture and transport.

Acting DBM Secretary Rolando Toledo said agencies are being directed to realign spending to support these measures.

“In support of the objectives of Memorandum Circular (MC) 114 and Executive Order (EO) 110, the DBM recommends mandating all departments and agencies to save at least 20 percent from non-essential MOOE,” Toledo said.

EO 110 declares a national energy emergency and establishes the Unified Package for Livelihoods, Industry, Food, and Transport, a framework to ensure the steady supply of essential goods while coordinating government and private sector response and balancing short-term relief with long-term energy security.

MC 114, meanwhile, directs agencies to adopt strict energy conservation measures, including reducing electricity and fuel use and limiting non-essential spending to free up resources for priority programs.

DEPDev Secretary Arsenio Balisacan warned of mounting risks if oil prices remain elevated.

“In the worst scenario, inflation could be as high as 6 to 7 percent if oil prices were to stay at $150 per barrel. And that’s quite high. It’s just like going back to the high inflation of the early 2023 when inflation was hitting at 6 to 8 percent,” he said.

“These assumptions may be a little bit scary, but I think they’ll be more tempered,” he added.

Balisacan said the oil shock could also slow economic growth from earlier projections of 5 to 6 percent, as higher fuel costs dampen demand and raise production and transport expenses.

He said the projections are meant to guide policy decisions, particularly in protecting domestic demand and cushioning vulnerable sectors.

The LEAD Council hearing, presided over by Committee on Ways and Means chair and Marikina City Rep. Miro Quimbo, is equipping lawmakers with concrete policy options to respond decisively to the crisis.

The House is moving to align legislative measures with the executive’s response, focusing on targeted relief, market interventions, and structural reforms to protect Filipinos while sustaining economic stability.

Tags: ECON MANAGERS FUEL TAX

Post navigation

Previous GSIS releases ₱6.2B ‘Balik Ginhawa’ refunds to qualified members, pensioners
Next Support for young farmers crucial, say co-ops amid crises

Related Stories

DOE: VAT cut on power must balance relief, finances
  • Business

DOE: VAT cut on power must balance relief, finances

Inflation rate for low-income households jumps to 8.5% in April 2026 — PSA
  • Business

Inflation rate for low-income households jumps to 8.5% in April 2026 — PSA

Fuel prices rise again; gasoline up for second straight week
  • Business

Fuel prices rise again; gasoline up for second straight week

ODDNEWS

  • Man arrested for faking lotto ticket to claim ₱172M jackpot
  • General in Hot Water: Napolcom cites P70k shoes as grounds for charges
  • Christmas Tragedy: Italian man chokes to death on panettone during family reunion
  • Japanese Woman Weds AI: The future of relationships?
  • A Single Dad’s Desperate Act: Police Chief’s Kindness Saves the Day
  • Security guard returns lost P1.5M bracelet

Source: USD/PHP @ Fri, 8 May.

Weather

Manila
Current weather
-º
Sunrise-
Sunset-
-
-
Forecast
Rain chance-
-
-
Forecast
Rain chance-
-
-
Forecast
Rain chance-
Manila weather

Latest Comments

  1. 스포츠중계 on Wage hikes effective in Northern Mindanao, Caraga this Labor Day
  2. 실시간스포츠중계 on Wage hikes effective in Northern Mindanao, Caraga this Labor Day

  • Front Page
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Donation
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
©2026 MetroSunDaily. All rights reserved. | DarkNews by AF themes.