Food Prices in PH Could Spike 50% If Middle East Crisis Drags On

  • Publish date: since 8 hours Reading time: 1 min read

Rice, pork, and chicken may see sharp increases as global supply chains face pressure

Related articles
How the Middle East Oil Crisis Could Hit Filipino Consumers
Kuwait Ranks Fifth in Regional Food Security in Q4 2022
How the US-Israel-Iran War is Hitting Filipino Farmers and Fishers

Brace for impact—food prices in the Philippines could surge by at least 50% if the ongoing Middle East crisis continues, according to worst-case projections.

With tensions disrupting global trade routes and supply chains, essential goods like rice, pork, and chicken could become significantly more expensive in the coming months.

Why prices could jump

The Philippines relies heavily on imports for key food items and fuel. Any prolonged disruption in the Middle East—especially in major shipping routes—can drive up transport and production costs.

Higher fuel prices alone can trigger a domino effect, making it more expensive to:

  • Import rice and other staples

  • Transport goods nationwide

  • Produce and distribute meat products

Rice, pork, chicken most at risk

These three staples are expected to take the biggest hit:

  • Rice: Import costs may rise due to shipping delays and higher global prices

  • Pork: Feed and logistics costs could push prices up

  • Chicken: Production and transport expenses may increase

In a worst-case scenario, consumers could see prices jump by half or more, putting pressure on daily budgets.

What this means for Filipinos

For households, this could mean tighter spending and fewer affordable food options. For businesses, especially in food and retail, it could lead to price adjustments or smaller portions.

Not final—but something to watch

Experts say this is still a worst-case scenario, not a certainty. However, if the conflict drags on, the risk of rising food prices becomes more real.

For now, it’s a situation worth keeping an eye on—especially for anyone budgeting their weekly groceries.