Pea and her companion Jen take viewers on a walking tour of the Dumaguete City wet market during the pandemic, interviewing street vendors and market sellers about their incomes, how COVID-19 has affected their earnings, and what their plans are if things get worse. The video doubles as a practical guide showing exactly where ordinary Filipinos shop, what things cost, and how families stretch tiny budgets β with the bleak recurring discovery that almost nobody has savings or a backup plan.
Street mango vendor (first stop, Kazan Park area)
- Selling unwrapped mangoes as typical street food β 10 pesos each (about 20 cents USD)
- Pays the government 10 pesos per day for permission to sell on the street
- Daily income during pandemic: about 300 pesos (~$6 USD)
- Income before pandemic: about 600 pesos (~$12 USD) β cut roughly in half
Nanay Marily β elderly vegetable vendor on the street
- A grandmother ("nanay") who has only been selling for two months; before that she cared for grandchildren while their parents (married to construction workers) worked
- She doesn't own the vegetables she sells β she gets them from someone else and earns only a percentage of each sale
- Products and prices: Baguio beans 20 pesos/pack (~$0.40), chayote 20 pesos for 4 pieces, garlic 20 pesos for 5 pieces
- Pea explains why Filipinos buy in tiny retail quantities β they can't afford bulk purchasing, but can feed about six adults on 300 pesos a day by buying small amounts daily
- Nanay Marily's daily income: only 100β150 pesos ($2β$3 USD)
- Works 7 days a week, 6 AM to 5 PM β 11 hours a day
- Pays 10 pesos daily (~$0.20) for permission to sell
- Has no savings β all earnings go straight to food
- Her husband is sick and she is the sole provider for the family
Ate Gina β street vendor selling snacks, candy, biscuits, and water
- Net profit on a good day: 300 pesos (~$6 USD)
- On rainy days: as low as 60 pesos ($1.20 USD)
- Before pandemic: earned 600β700 pesos/day β pandemic cut income by 50% or more
- If lockdown continues: expects zero income
- Has no savings
- Works 7 days a week, rain or shine, 9β10 hours per day
- Has one child, a 21-year-old son still in school whom she supports
- Used to work in the laundry department at Lee Plaza hotel
- Five-year plan: for her son to finish school and to keep surviving by selling
The "new normal" β pandemic details observed during the walk
- Long queues outside banks β people can only enter on their assigned day
- Temperature checks by guards before entering any establishment, including fast food restaurants
- Beggars stationed outside the Catholic church (Dumaguete Diocese / Saint Matthew)
Inside the Dumaguete wet market β vegetable area
- Vendors pay 33 pesos (~$0.66) for their market stall permits
- Pea explains this is where common Filipinos shop daily because supermarkets are too expensive
- Specific prices: tomatoes 60 pesos/kilo (~$1.20 for 2.2 lbs), squash sold per piece at 10 pesos (~$0.20) per 400g piece
- Pea buys a full bag of vegetables for 80 pesos β less than $2 USD total
- A vegetable vendor interviewed says if the pandemic continues there will be no income, has no savings, no plans β "just living every day, depends on the customers"
Flower section of the wet market
- Flowers sold by the piece: 20 pesos (~$0.40) for most flowers, 30 pesos (~$0.60) for roses
- A set/bouquet runs about 150 pesos (~$3 USD), lasting about a week
- Flower vendors pay the government 100 pesos (~$2) per week as market rent
- Open 7 days a week, 7 AM to 5 PM
- Average daily net profit: 300 pesos (~$6 USD)
- Before pandemic: earned 1,000β2,000 pesos/day depending on occasions and events
- Plan B if pandemic continues: switch from flowers to selling plants instead
Fish and meat area
- Tiny octopus: 140 pesos/kilo (~$3 USD)
- Fish: approximately 160 pesos/kilo (~$3.20)
- Tilapia and lapu-lapu (grouper) available β Pea notes lapu-lapu shares a name with the local hero from Cebu City
Kuya Richard β fruit vendor selling grapes
- Grapes: 150 pesos/kilo (~$3 USD); gives Pea a discount to 120 pesos
- Gets his stock from different suppliers depending on who has the best product
- Daily capital (investment in stock): 1,200 pesos (~$24 USD)
- Average daily net income: 550 pesos (~$11 USD)
- Family: wife and one child, age 9, in grade 4 β he is the sole breadwinner
- Before pandemic: earned about 1,000β1,800 pesos/day β pandemic cut income roughly 50%
- Five-year plan: "a better life" for himself; for his child to stay healthy and continue school
- Plan B if lockdown continues: none β just keep selling
- Has small savings: manages to save about 50 pesos/day (~$1 USD)
- Pea notes he's the only vendor interviewed who saves anything at all
The "BJ for 40 cents" segment
- Pea teases that she'll show where to get a "BJ" for 40 cents β reveals it's buko juice (fresh coconut juice)
- 20 pesos per coconut (~$0.40 USD)
- Notes that buko juice is high in electrolytes, better than Gatorade
Pea's overall takeaways
- Filipinos generally have no savings and no Plan B or C
- If the virus worsens and triggers another major lockdown, "we might just starve to death"
- Filipinos buy everything in tiny quantities β salt, pepper, chili powder, oyster sauce β purchasing only what they need for that day
- This is how ordinary Filipinos survive: daily purchasing, daily earning, no buffer