Philippines' Marcos puts brakes on transport fare hike


Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. talks to a tricycle driver as he visits a cash relief assistance center to help drivers in their livelihood as oil prices continue to rise on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, in Manila, Philippines. -- AP Photo/Aaron Favila

MANILA (AFP): Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos on Wednesday put the brakes on a public transportation fare hike announced just a day earlier, promising the country's commuters free rides instead.

The archipelago nation, which imports nearly all of its crude oil from the Middle East, has been scrambling to deal with eye-watering price increases triggered by the US-Israeli war with Iran.

Since hostilities erupted, the Philippines has instituted a four-day workweek for civil servants, distributed cash handouts to tricycle drivers, and seen its sole refinery open discussions to buy Russian oil.

On Tuesday, the country's transportation regulator announced fare hikes across an array of public transport, with rides in jeepneys, used by millions of Filipinos every day, set to jump about eight percent.

"In my opinion ... now is probably not the time to raise fares for the people," Marcos said Wednesday in walking back the increase, citing the ongoing Middle East war.

Instead, Marcos said he had ordered the country's transportation department "to launch free rides all over the Philippines" along with discounts on light rail systems and toll roads.

Marcos did not specify which forms of public transport would be made free.

In a statement that followed shortly, the transportation department said it would suspend the fare hikes in line with the president's request while "preparing" programmes, including free rides.

Mody Floranda, president of a local jeepney drivers' union, told AFP that his group was unhappy with the decision.

"We are dismayed that the president of our country had ruthlessly recalled what his government has granted to us," he said. -- AFP

 

 

 

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

Pakistan announces pause in strikes on Afghanistan, two days after deadly Kabul airstrike
Singapore and Japan announce strategic partnership on 60th anniversary of diplomatic ties
Trespasser caught in viral hippo Moo Deng's Thai zoo pen
HKGAI to launch world’s first governed AI agent network amid OpenClaw frenzy
South Korea and Japan bear brunt of global stock sell-offs amid oil shock
Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Wednesday (March 18, 2026)
A new US trade deal with Indonesia secures fossil fuels and access to critical minerals
Man charged with harbouring 10 women for prostitution, absconding from Singapore
Thai pension fund needs reform and hits risk limit on selloff
UN maritime body kicks off emergency talks on Mideast shipping

Others Also Read