CEBU CITY -- When the last motorcade cleared Mactan’s palm-lined roads on May 8, the 48th ASEAN Summit left behind more than traffic advisories and shuttered resorts, it left Cebu with a test case: Can hosting ASEAN deliver real gains to the ordinary Filipino?
Cebu governor Pamela Baricuatro highlighted the importance of collaboration and unity in achieving excellence and expressed her gratitude to the local organizing team, the volunteers, various government agencies, healthcare workers the police and the media for the support and cooperation in ensuring a safe and secure ASEAN summit.
“Cebu was at the spotlight in international news. We have shown the world that Cebu is always ready to host such important events, and the President was happy,” Baricutro said at the Post-ASEAN press briefing on May 12 at the Capitol.
P/COL Kim Moletas also highlighted the achievement of zero major incidents and the positive feedback from foreign leaders who felt safe and secure. The success is attributed to the collective effort and hard work of government agencies and the public.
“The important thing is learning from past events to improve future ones, ensuring no incidents occur before, during, or after hosting events. It extends beyond crime scene management to include disaster preparedness for both natural and man-made disasters. The focus is on international event readiness, not just on cooperation among agencies but also on comprehensive planning and response strategies,” Moletas added.
What Cebu gained from the 48th ASEAN Summit
On the economic scoreboard, the summit transformed Mactan into a MICE showcase overnight. With 3,000+ delegates, 1,000+ international media, and 11 heads of state concentrated in Lapu-Lapu City, hotels in Punta Engaño reported a 40% occupancy spike. The intangible/social impact is its brand value with global media coverage positioned Cebu as “the Philippines’ tourism gateway” beyond Manila, DOT officials said.
Anthony Noel, president of the Lapu-Lapu Chamber of Commerce, called it a boost even if bookings were not as full-blown as expected after the summit was cut from five days to three days.
“Cebu is increasingly positioning itself as a viable destination for international MICE events, infrastructure stress test for MCIA, Mactan World Museum IMC, Shangri-La Mactan all used at scale and the ASEAN hosting success makes Cebu more competitive for future ASEAN, APEC, ADB events,” Noel added.
For the MSMEs, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) positioned the event as a launchpad to ASEAN’s 600M consumer market. GCash onboarded Cebuano micro-entrepreneurs at the summit, pushing cashless payments and digital inclusion. DTI- Usec Allan Gepty described Cebu as a “key hub for trade, tourism, and maritime connectivity.”
On cultural and tourism exchange, Cebu was on
the ASEAN centerstage being chosen in part to highlight the country’s tourism
appeal. The BIMP-EAGA Summit at
Shangri-La Mactan spotlighted East ASEAN connectivity, with President Marcos
Jr. insisting development must be felt in their daily lives.
First Lady Liza Marcos ran a “bare bones” spouses’ program dubbed the “Ilocano effect” — frugal but real Filipino hospitality in the little things done right, while the International Media Center (ICM) at Mactan World Museum hosted 400+ journalists, turning Cebu into ASEAN’s story hub for 72 hours.
What’s next for the ordinary Filipino?
What didn’t change and the limits-- No immediate GDP jump: Summit was “bare-bones” and shortened due to Middle East crisis. Economic gains are short-term unless follow-on events materialize. Inequality in the hotel and MICE sector gained, but jeepney drivers and small vendors faced fare hikes and disruption without proportional benefit.
Energy/food prices, Summit agreed on coordination, but actual impact on Cebuano household bills depends on ASEAN Power Grid and fuel reserve implementation later. “The adverse effects of the Middle East crisis remind us that the world is interconnected, and no country can navigate external shocks alone,” DTI-Usec Allan Gepty said, adding that energy initiatives + renewables can help cushion the impact of global energy shocks.
For the Filipino families, the Summit aims to lower
the inflation tax on Filipino families by fortifying regional food supplies and
ensuring free flow of essential goods. The Summit also created temporary jobs
for transport, events, and media support tied to delegate influx.
President Ferdinand Marcos on the other hand said, he will lead discussions on how the region can bolster regional preparedness, ensure stable energy supply and accelerate energy diversification.
“I will push to strengthen food security, keeping the free flow of essential goods and building measures to support farmers and MSMEs. Their safety is equally important, recognizing the contribution of overseas ASEAN nationals in our societies and our economies,” the President said.
“A disruption that begins in the Strait of Hormuz ripples through Singapore, the Strait of Malacca, and onward to Manila, Tokyo, Seoul, Jakarta within days. The Philippines is arguably the most dependent on oil from the Middle East,” the President added.
Atty. Rodel Batocabe, Cebu Chamber of Commerce opined that the summit is a gift and a curse for Cebu. “We’re seeing record bookings, but at what cost? If we don’t manage the environmental and social fallout, the long-term damage could outweigh the short-term gains,” he said.
Agreements at the Foreign Ministers and Leaders’ Meetings
The 48th ASEAN Summit has forged agreements that touch daily life, including energy and food security which are considered the Summit’s core. With the Strait of Hormuz blockade spiking oil prices, Marcos told leaders: “We must ensure regional energy security and resilience” and the Ministers pledged to accelerate cross-border electricity links + submarine cable framework for the ASEAN Power Grid.
On Petroleum sharing, the ministers agreed to fast-tract sharing of emergency fuel-sharing pact proposed by Sen. Imee Marcos, while food supply commitment is to keep “free flow of essential goods” and support farmers/MSMEs to “lower the inflation tax on Filipino families”.
On Maritime and safety. ASEAN Leaders’ Declaration on Maritime Cooperation was to make ASEAN Coast Guard Forum a formal body + ASEAN Maritime Centre in PH and for OFWS, President Marcos pushed for safety of ASEAN nationals, citing their economic contributions.
Other agreements included the welcoming of Timor-Leste as 11th full ASEAN member; President Marcos brokered talks to advance Thailand-Cambodia fragile ceasefire.
As the days ended, the dust settled, the 48th ASEAN Summit 2026 proved that ASEAN can move fast when crisis hits — it was shortened, refocused, and delivered 3 concrete declarations in 48 hours. For Cebu, it was a branding win and a MICE dry-run.
For the ordinary Filipino, the real impact hinges on whether the ASEAN Power Grid, food corridors, and maritime center turn from MOUs into megawatts, rice prices, and safer seas.
As one Cebuano vendor told local media: “Nindot
ang ASEAN kung ang bugas ug kuryente mubarato. Kung dili, drawing ra na.” (ASEAN is good if rice and electricity get
cheaper. If not, it’s just a drawing.) (Photos: MBCNewman & Google Images)
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