The Philippine Central Bank (BSP) has decided to raise its key interest rate again.
On April 23, 2026, the BSP increased its policy rate by 0.25 percentage points to 4.50%. This move signals a proactive fight against rising inflation. Governor Eli Remolona explained that more small, data-dependent hikes might be necessary to keep the situation under control. This is a significant shift, showing the central bank is now prioritizing inflation control even as it tries to protect economic growth.
So, what triggered this decision? The causes are a classic mix of external pressures on a smaller, open economy. First, geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, particularly disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, have kept Brent crude oil prices above $100 per barrel. This directly increases fuel and electricity costs in the Philippines. Second, this, along with other factors, caused the Philippine peso to weaken, sliding past the ₱60 per US dollar mark in March. A weaker peso makes imported goods, including oil, more expensive.
These two factors—high oil prices and a weak peso—are the 'first-round effects'. They pushed the March inflation rate to 4.1%, breaching the BSP's target range of 2-4%. But the BSP's main worry is the 'second-round effects'. This is when the initial price shocks start to spread throughout the economy. For example, in response to higher fuel costs, transport fares were already approved for an increase in mid-March. If this trend continues, workers might demand higher wages to cope with the rising cost of living. This could create a dangerous wage-price spiral and cause inflation expectations to become 'unanchored,' meaning people permanently expect high inflation.
The BSP's strategy is to be proactive but measured. They are acting now to prevent those second-round effects from taking hold. The decision to hike by only 25 basis points, despite discussing a 50-point move, shows they are trying to balance inflation control with economic stability. They want to avoid choking off the fragile economic recovery expected in 2027. This approach is like a staircase, not a sledgehammer—a series of small, careful steps to cool the economy gently.
- Second-Round Effects: When an initial price shock (like oil prices) leads to broader price increases, such as higher wages and transportation costs.
- Basis Points (bp): One basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point (0.01%). A 25 bp hike means a 0.25% increase.
- Inflation Pass-Through: The extent to which changes in the exchange rate affect domestic inflation. A weaker currency increases the price of imports, 'passing through' to consumer prices.
