The peso is not just a currency. It is a daily referendum on confidence, competence, and credibility. When it flirts with 59 to the dollar, it is not merely reacting to U.S. interest rates or oil prices. It is reacting to how the world sees us and how we see ourselves.
At 58.625 to the dollar, the peso has reached its weakest level in eight months. The headlines say it only “inched down.” But behind that decimal point lies a far larger story: the slow erosion of faith in how our economy is being managed. The central bank can call it seasonal, the Department of Finance can call it temporary, but to ordinary Filipinos watching prices rise week after week, it feels anything but minor.
Peso volatility is not new, but the context today is different. The country is still paying for pandemic-era debt, the trade deficit is widening, and dollar reserves are being spent faster than they are replenished. The balance of payments is under strain, and even remittance inflows are not cushioning the slide the way they used to. Meanwhile, global investors are quietly moving to safer, higher-yield markets while we debate the politics of spending instead of the substance of fiscal discipline.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas faces an impossible choice. If it raises interest rates again to protect the peso, it risks choking what little consumer demand remains. If it stands still, the peso weakens further and fuels imported inflation. Either way, the public pays at the pump, in the grocery, and on every imported medicine and component that keeps businesses running.
The peso’s weakness is more than a number on a trading screen. It translates into the shrinking purchasing power of workers who are already stretched thin. It widens the gap between those who earn in dollars and those who live in pesos. It erodes trust in government pronouncements that inflation is “under control” when reality says otherwise.
What can be done? The answer is not another round of press releases or patriotic calls for confidence. The government must move from reassurance to reform. The BSP can defend the peso through selective intervention, but it cannot do it alone. The Department of Finance must accelerate measures that boost real productivity, not just short-term spending. The Department of Trade must support export diversification and help manufacturers compete again. The energy sector must stabilize fuel supply, because oil shocks are the silent partner of every peso fall.
Above all, policymakers need to understand that credibility is a currency. Once it devalues, recovery takes far longer than the peso’s daily swings. The market listens less to what the government says and more to what it does. Right now, the peso is doing the talking and its message is not flattering.
For investors, the peso’s weakness is a cautionary tale. For consumers, it is a daily tax. For government, it should be a warning. The currency does not lie. It simply reflects the confidence we have lost and the discipline we have yet to regain.
