Opinion | Why the Philippines walks a delicate balance as Asean chair

This is not the chairmanship anyone planned. The Philippines holds the Asean chair at the exact moment multiple crises are converging, and it is structurally exposed to all of them.
Starting with energy, perhaps no country in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations is as nakedly vulnerable to Hormuz disruptions as the Philippines. MUFG Research Portal estimates that every US$10 oil increase cuts Philippine growth by 0.2 percentage points and adds 0.6 percentage points to inflation. With Brent crude having spiked past US$115 at one point, the arithmetic is not comfortable.
Remittances from Philippine workers across the Persian Gulf are a pillar of the economy, supporting consumption and household incomes. Capital Economics warned that a prolonged regional conflict could cut Middle East remittances by 30-35 per cent, threatening one of the country’s most important financial lifelines.







