Fiscal Turnaround: Cebu City Slashes Budget Deficit by Over P2.3 Billion

Updated 9 Hours Ago
ByHOMESPH NEWS
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Summary

Through rigorous cost-cutting and spending controls, the Cebu City government has reduced its budget deficit by over P2.3 billion, successfully steering the local government toward fiscal recovery.

Business & Economy

Cebu City

Governance & Fiscal Policy
Governance & Fiscal Policy

Cebu — The city has achieved a significant financial milestone, narrowing its budget deficit from P3.43 billion to P1.12 billion in just one year. During his first State of the City Address (SOCA) on July 7, 2026, Mayor Nestor Archival announced this P2.31 billion reduction, marking a major turning point after his administration declared a fiscal crisis upon taking office in 2025. By implementing a disciplined, year-long austerity program, the city has successfully begun to bridge the gap between its rising available funds and its total financial obligations.

A Year of Prudent Spending and Austerity

The path to this recovery was paved by a series of aggressive administrative measures designed to eliminate non-essential spending. Mayor Archival’s administration introduced a "No Appointment, No Work" policy, significantly curbing unnecessary hiring and limiting new personnel to essential frontline roles. Additionally, the city prioritized energy-saving initiatives—such as installing solar power in government buildings and adopting a compressed four-day workweek—to drastically lower electricity and fuel overheads. These operational changes were complemented by a shift in capital spending, where project obligations dropped from P2.86 billion in mid-2025 to a conservative P101.78 million by June 2026, signaling a move toward fiscal consolidation over expansion.

The Challenge of Restricted Funds

Despite the positive trajectory, the city’s financial report highlights the complexity of its cash position. While the city recorded P10.28 billion in total available funds, a significant portion—amounting to P8.69 billion—is tied up in legally restricted accounts such as the Local Development Fund, the Special Education Fund, and various Trust Funds. This means these resources cannot be repurposed to cover regular operating expenses or settle outstanding accounts payable, which grew to P2.46 billion as of early 2026. Because of these constraints, the city’s General Fund remains tight, necessitating continued caution and the administration's ongoing commitment to balancing its books in the coming fiscal year.

Building Toward Long-Term Stability

The remaining P1.12-billion funding gap serves as a reminder that the work of fiscal reform is far from complete. Mayor Archival emphasized that the city will continue its pursuit of operational efficiency, improved revenue collection, and strict expenditure controls to eventually eliminate the deficit entirely. By aligning the city’s annual budget with more realistic revenue projections—as seen in the streamlined 2026 budget—the administration is setting a new standard for transparency and accountability. As Cebu City enters the second year of this fiscal recovery plan, the focus remains on transforming these initial gains into a stable, sustainable financial foundation that can support the city’s long-term development goals.

HOMESPH NEWS

Jul 9, 2026

HomesPH

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