Close Menu
Philstar Tech
    • Deals
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    Philstar Tech
    • Home
    • All Post
    • News
      • Features
    • Tech @Life
    • Reviews
      • Fitness
      • Laptops
      • Mobility
      • Smartphones
      • Wearables
    • Opinion
    • Latest Issue
    Philstar Tech
    Home » The ‘death and taxes’ of tech for 2026
    Opinion

    The ‘death and taxes’ of tech for 2026

    Jayvee FernandezBy Jayvee FernandezDecember 16, 20254 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The old adage ‘nothing is certain except death and taxes’ is going to be the banner statement in tech for 2026. I’m referring to the death of jobs in the BPO sector and the huge “AI tax” on consumer electronics due to the overall increase in demand for RAM for data centers.

    Since 2024, I’ve been covering the BPO sector from a macroscrope. The motherhood statement by Jimmy Go, President and CEO of VST ECS was that globally, AI is poised to replace 85 million jobs. But it will also create 70 million jobs. I asked myself where does the Philippines stand in the 15 million deficit. The answer came swiftly: Jack Madrid, President and CEO of IBPAP said that despite the revenue growth of the IT-BPM sector by roughly 8.8% since 2023, he admits that there is a skill gap, a reskilling issue that has contributed to the loss of several roles in the BPO sector. The Philippines has always had the competitive advantage of being an English as a first language country (at least compared to many of its ASEAN neighbors), giving it a head start when it comes to support desk roles. This may change. At a Concentrix event earlier this year I was made witness to an AI tool they were deploying on the floor that, in real time, removed accents and dialect speech patterns when on a call. This was great for agents who were having a hard time adjusting to English, but it also meant the language barrier may no longer be a factor to consider. As Madrid said in a previous interview, The Philippine IT-BPM industry is experiencing strong demand. In 2024, we are expecting to reach 1.82 million FTE and USD 38 billion in revenue. It is not a matter of a demand problem but a supply challenge.”

    A supply challenge. We aren’t upskilling agents fast enough. 

    Now, when it comes to the ‘AI tax’ this one hits all of us directly. I’ve spoken to several sources within the consumer electronics field and there is worry for the entry level smartphone market. These are the phones you see being sold at P5,000 and below on TikTok. The margins for these phones are too small and revenue is derived by sheer volume. The industry predicts at least a 30% price increase across the board which means saying goodbye to “budget” phones released in 2026. Your P5,000 phone will now cost P7,500 and your P10,000 phone will cost somewhere below P15,000. Here’s some advice: if you are holding off buying a phone, now would be a good time to buy a 2024 model. The huge increase in price is due to global manufacturers shifting production to enterprise-grade HBM or “high bandwidth memory” – the RAM used to power data centers specifically for AI. Video cards, RAM modules (both DDR4 and DDR5), and really any sort of memory you find in a Nintendo Switch, gaming console, desktop, smartphone – expect a drastic increase in price.

    How long will this last? Unlike the bitcoin mining rush during the pandemic, this trend may seem to last longer than a year. Some analysts are predicting 2-3 years max which means if you are in need of a desktop computer, you may want to buy pre-assembled ones from earlier this year as the DIY route will be roadblocked by expensive RAM. Companies like Crucial have already shuttered their consumer line of business, opting instead to manufacture high-margin RAM for the hyperscalers. 

    How ironic that the ChatGPT and Gemini we use on our phones contributed to these devices ultimately becoming more expensive. And how they may ultimately contribute to replacing jobs.

    At the end of the day, sad to say, death and taxes – well, it’s all just business.

    ai job losses ram prices
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Jayvee Fernandez
    • Website
    • X (Twitter)
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn

    Former Technology Editor for The Philippine STAR and founder of A Bugged Life. Seasoned content marketer and Anvil Awards juror. Profile at JayveeFernandez.com

    Related Posts

    Project Genie allows creators to build their own interactive worlds

    February 5, 2026

    AI-powered scams are targeting Filipino concertgoers — and they’re getting harder to spot

    February 4, 2026

    Your own personal hell: Why you should play Silent Hill 2

    January 28, 2026

    Most Popular

    CHERRY is back to making phones, debuts with the solid AQUA S11 PRO

    February 17, 20243 Mins Read

    Prep Palacios on steering Google PH in a fast-moving digital Philippines

    December 28, 20253 Mins Read

    Here’s where you can officially buy the Nintendo Switch 2 in the Philippines (with 2 years warranty perks to match)

    July 8, 20253 Mins Read

    AI-powered scams are targeting Filipino concertgoers — and they’re getting harder to spot

    February 4, 20263 Mins Read

    YouTube doubles down on creators, tighter controls in 2026 plan

    February 2, 20263 Mins Read

    Yes, you can still use Google on a HUAWEI phone. I tried it. Here’s what actually works

    July 29, 20254 Mins Read

    Latest

    CICC, BSP step up monitoring systems to prevent financial scams

    By Marlet SalazarFebruary 6, 20261 Min Read

    Solar generator Jackery lands in the Philippines

    By PhilSTAR Tech TeamFebruary 6, 20263 Mins Read

    Project Genie allows creators to build their own interactive worlds

    By Marlet SalazarFebruary 5, 20262 Mins Read

    Power Tech Trends in 2026: Unplugged

    By PhilSTAR Tech TeamFebruary 5, 20263 Mins Read

    AI-powered scams are targeting Filipino concertgoers — and they’re getting harder to spot

    By Dawn SolanoFebruary 4, 20263 Mins Read

    Infinix unveils XPAD Edge 13.2-inch tablet priced at PHP 15,999

    By PhilSTAR Tech TeamFebruary 4, 20262 Mins Read
    Copyright © 2026 Philstar Tech | Powered by The Philippine STAR

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.