Revision #1
System
22 days ago
From Tourism to Typhoons: Inside Marcos' New Community Resilience Push and the Cabinet Move That Signals a Strategic Shift
On March 12, 2026, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. pulled Tourism Secretary Christina Garcia Frasco from one of his administration's most visible cabinet posts and placed her into a role that did not previously exist: Presidential Adviser for Sustainable and Resilient Communities [1][2]. The reassignment, confirmed by the Presidential Communications Office, marks the latest move in a long-running effort by the Marcos administration to address the Philippines' acute vulnerability to climate-related disasters — a vulnerability that has, for three consecutive years, earned the country the dubious distinction of topping the World Risk Index as the most disaster-prone nation on Earth [3].
But the creation of an advisory position, rather than the full department that legislators have been demanding for years, has raised pointed questions. Is this a genuine strategic escalation in disaster preparedness? Or is it a lateral move for a politically embattled official wrapped in the language of resilience?
A New Role for a Familiar Face
Christina Garcia Frasco, 44, is a lawyer and career politician from one of Cebu's most prominent political families. The daughter of Cebu Governor Gwendolyn Garcia and granddaughter of former Governor Pablo P. Garcia, Frasco served as mayor of Liloan, Cebu from 2016 to 2022 before Marcos tapped her as tourism secretary at the start of his presidency [4].
Her tenure at the Department of Tourism (DOT) was marked by both ambition and controversy. She launched the "Love the Philippines" tourism slogan in 2023, replacing the long-running "It's More Fun in the Philippines" campaign, and brought the Michelin Guide to the country for the first time [4]. But she also drew social media criticism over promotional materials prominently featuring her image, leading the department to issue a directive in February 2026 removing her photos from regional office materials [2].
According to the Presidential Communications Office, Marcos tasked Frasco with "strengthening the implementation and sustained follow-through of priority national initiatives at the community level," citing "increasing climate-related hazards and disruptions that affect local economies and livelihoods" [1][5]. Undersecretary Verna Buensuceso will serve as officer-in-charge of the DOT pending a permanent replacement [2].
The president expressed confidence that Frasco's experience "working closely with local governments and communities" during her time at tourism and in Cebu local government would serve the new role well [5].
The World's Most Disaster-Prone Country
The urgency behind any resilience initiative in the Philippines is not abstract. It is etched in recurring catastrophe.
The Philippines topped the WorldRiskIndex in 2024 with a score of 46.9 and again in 2025 with a score of 46.56, ranking first globally for the third consecutive year [3]. The index measures disaster risk across 193 countries based on exposure to climate hazards, population susceptibility, and adaptive capacity. The Philippines placed fourth in exposure (39.99) and recorded a vulnerability score of 54.20. Sixty percent of the country's total land area is classified as hazard-exposed, and 74% of the population is susceptible to natural disasters [3].
The human toll is staggering. In 2025, 23 tropical cyclones struck the Philippines, affecting more than 20 million Filipinos. The deadliest was Typhoon Tino (international name: Kalmaegi), which killed 269 people, injured 523, and left 113 missing [6]. In 2024, 11 storms hit the country, with total damages exceeding 43 billion Philippine pesos [7]. The country experiences roughly 20 typhoons annually, though not all make landfall — many still bring devastating winds, rain, storm surges, and flooding.
These disasters do not simply destroy infrastructure. They erode economic gains in a country that has otherwise maintained strong GDP growth. The Philippines posted 5.7% GDP growth in 2024 and 5.5% in 2023, but each typhoon season threatens to wipe out billions in development progress [8].
The Department That Never Was
Frasco's appointment arrives against the backdrop of a years-long legislative push to establish a full Department of Disaster Resilience (DDR) — a cabinet-level agency that would consolidate disaster management functions currently scattered across multiple government bodies.
The campaign gained renewed momentum after the devastating 2024 typhoon season. Representative Lray Villafuerte urged Congress to pass the DDR bill in 2025 [9]. A substitute bill combining 36 similar DDR proposals, including one principally authored by House Speaker Martin Romualdez, cleared two House panels in November 2024 [9].
Currently, disaster preparedness, operations, and post-disaster recovery are overseen by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), which is led by the Office of Civil Defense under the Department of National Defense [10]. Critics have long argued this arrangement is bureaucratically fragmented, leaving response coordination slow and rehabilitation efforts inconsistent.
But the legislative path has been complicated by competing visions. Marcos himself initially expressed interest in a standalone department after his 2022 inauguration, but later shifted support toward his sister Senator Imee Marcos' proposal to strengthen the NDRRMC and place it directly under the Office of the President — a model inspired by the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) [10].
In April 2023, Marcos signed Executive Order No. 24, creating the Disaster Response and Crisis Management Task Force (DRCMTF), a temporary body to coordinate disaster planning. The move drew skepticism about duplicating NDRRMC functions, though the administration clarified that the NDRRMC would handle "long-term policies on disaster prevention and rehabilitation" while the DRCMTF managed "operational and immediate impacts" [10].
The appointment of Frasco as presidential adviser — rather than the creation of a full department — suggests the Marcos administration may be hedging its bets, creating executive-branch capacity for resilience work while waiting for Congress to resolve the department question.
The $700 Million Safety Net
While the domestic institutional debate continues, the Philippines has secured significant international support. In July 2025, the World Bank approved the Philippines Community Resilience Project, locally branded as "Pagkilos" (Filipino for "action"), backed by a $700 million loan from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, with the Philippine government contributing an additional $174.35 million for a total project cost of $874.35 million [11].
Pagkilos is designed to reach approximately 18 million households across 500 climate-vulnerable municipalities in 49 provinces, selected based on high poverty incidence and significant exposure to climate hazards [11]. The project will engage communities in identifying climate and natural hazard risks, developing resilience plans, and implementing sub-projects including flood and drought mitigation, landslide protection, surge protection, breakwaters, and infrastructure retrofitting [11].
The project also incorporates nature-based solutions — agroforestry, erosion control, community forests, wetlands, and waterway management — and provides training and capacity-building for local government units and community volunteers [11].
The scale of Pagkilos underscores a critical point: the Philippines cannot fund adequate disaster resilience from its national budget alone. The country's DRRM fund, while growing, remains insufficient relative to the scale of annual damage, creating a structural reliance on international development financing.
The Broader Cabinet Reshuffle
Frasco's reassignment did not occur in isolation. It is part of an ongoing cabinet reorganization that began in May 2025 when Marcos requested courtesy resignations from all cabinet members following the 2025 Philippine general election [12]. In early 2026, the Palace denied rumors of a "looming shakeup," even as acting appointments in several agencies fueled speculation about further changes [13].
Marcos subsequently urged 21 cabinet members to "demonstrate renewed vigor" and show more performance in their areas of responsibility [12]. The Frasco move can thus be read on multiple levels: as a genuine policy priority, as a soft landing for a politically embattled cabinet member, or as both simultaneously.
Expert Skepticism: Structure vs. Substance
Governance scholars and disaster management experts have cautioned that institutional reorganization — whether through new departments, task forces, or advisory positions — is not a substitute for addressing underlying systemic weaknesses.
Cherry Ann Madriaga, writing in the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute's analysis platform Fulcrum, argued that "solving disaster risk reduction and management problems and the climate crisis should be inclusive and participatory" [10]. She noted that structural reorganization alone cannot address inadequate community participation, weak local government capacity, and top-down policy formulation that sidelines affected populations.
The Philippines did pass the Declaration of State of Imminent Disaster Act (Republic Act No. 12287) in September 2025, a landmark measure that institutionalizes anticipatory action in the country's disaster risk management framework [14]. The law allows the early release of government funds when the NDRRMC recommends a declaration of imminent disaster to the president, or when regional disaster councils advise local chief executives — a significant shift from reactive post-disaster funding.
But implementation of such laws depends on the same local government capacity that experts say remains weak. The question is whether Frasco's new role will meaningfully bridge the gap between national policy and community-level execution, or add another layer to an already complex institutional landscape.
What Comes Next
Frasco's mandate, as described by the Palace, is broad but vague: strengthen "priority national initiatives at the community level." The position lacks the institutional authority of a department secretary, the dedicated budget of a line agency, or the statutory mandate of a congressionally created body.
What it does have is proximity to the president. As a presidential adviser, Frasco reports directly to Marcos, potentially giving her the ability to cut through interagency coordination problems that have long plagued disaster response. Whether she can translate that access into tangible improvements for the 74% of Filipinos living in hazard-susceptible areas remains the essential test.
The Philippines stands at a crossroads in its disaster governance. A $700 million World Bank project is ramping up. Landmark anticipatory disaster legislation is on the books. A Department of Disaster Resilience bill is working its way through Congress. And now, a presidential adviser dedicated to community resilience has been installed.
The architecture is taking shape. Whether it can withstand the next super typhoon — and the one after that — is the question that 115 million Filipinos cannot afford to leave unanswered.
Sources (14)
- [1]Frasco named adviser on sustainable, resilient communitiespna.gov.ph
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has appointed Christina Garcia Frasco as Presidential Adviser for Sustainable and Resilient Communities, tasked with strengthening community-level implementation of national initiatives.
- [2]Frasco exits DoT, named as presidential adviserbworldonline.com
Frasco was reassigned from Tourism Secretary to Presidential Adviser for Sustainable and Resilient Communities after facing social media criticism over promotional materials featuring her image.
- [3]Philippines tops WorldRiskIndex 2025 as world's most disaster-prone countrymb.com.ph
The Philippines ranked first in the 2025 WorldRiskIndex with a score of 46.56, marking the third consecutive year topping the index. Sixty percent of the country's land area is hazard-exposed.
- [4]Christina Frasco - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org
Christina Garcia Frasco is a Filipino lawyer and politician who served as the 18th Secretary of Tourism. She previously served as mayor of Liloan, Cebu from 2016 to 2022.
- [5]Marcos names Frasco presidential adviser for sustainable and resilient communitiesfilipinotimes.net
President Marcos expressed confidence that Frasco's experience working with local governments and communities will help advance the administration's development priorities.
- [6]From storms to earthquakes: How natural calamities affected Filipinos in 2025newsinfo.inquirer.net
Throughout 2025, the Philippines was hit by 23 tropical cyclones affecting over 20 million Filipinos. Typhoon Tino was the deadliest, killing 269 people.
- [7]Emergency - Philippines: Typhoons and Floods - 2024go.ifrc.org
In 2024, 11 storms struck the Philippines with total damages exceeding 43 billion Philippine pesos. Cyclones Kristine and Leon caused the worst destruction.
- [8]World Bank - Philippines GDP Growth Dataworldbank.org
Philippines GDP growth: 5.69% (2024), 5.52% (2023), 7.58% (2022), 5.71% (2021), -9.52% (2020), 6.12% (2019).
- [9]Villafuerte tells Congress: Pass Department of Disaster Resilience bill in 2025mb.com.ph
A substitute bill combining 36 similar DDR bills cleared two House panels in November 2024. The proposed department would upgrade institutional capacity for disaster risk management.
- [10]President Marcos Jr.'s Disaster Policy: Is a New Disaster Agency in the Works?fulcrum.sg
Marcos shifted support from a standalone department to strengthening the NDRRMC under the Office of the President. Executive Order No. 24 created the DRCMTF as a temporary coordination body.
- [11]World Bank Supports Efforts to Strengthen Community Resilience for 18 million Households in the Philippinesworldbank.org
The $874.35 million Pagkilos project will engage 500 climate-vulnerable municipalities across 49 provinces, supporting flood mitigation, landslide protection, and nature-based solutions.
- [12]Cabinet reset takes shape: Marcos finalizes who stays, who goesasianjournal.com
Marcos requested courtesy resignations from all cabinet members following the 2025 Philippine general election, prompting an ongoing cabinet reorganization.
- [13]Palace: No looming shakeup amid concerns over acting Cabinet appointmentsmanilatimes.net
The Palace denied rumors of a looming shakeup in January 2026, even as acting appointments in several agencies fueled speculation about further cabinet changes.
- [14]Philippines passes landmark legislation on anticipatory action to protect communities before disasters strikewfp.org
The Declaration of State of Imminent Disaster Act (RA 12287) institutionalizes anticipatory action, allowing early release of government funds before disasters strike.