The Manila Times

Digitaliza­tion crucial vs corruption – Bersamin

- BY CATHERINE S. VALENTE AND PNA

XECUTIVE Secretary Lucas Bersamin said on Saturday that digitaliza­tion is crucial to the streamlini­ng of government processes and the fight against corruption.

Bersamin issued the statement after the Philippine­s ranked 115th in Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception Index, a one-notch improvemen­t from its previous ranking of 116th.

“We consider this result as both a challenge to do better and a reason for hope that the country is headed in the right direction,” Bersamin said.

“In line with the President’s clarion call for the entire Government ‘to show in deeds, not in words, that it is deserving of the people’s trust,’ earnest efforts are already being undertaken to implement the digital transforma­tion mandate of the Administra­tion in order to streamline institutio­nal processes and curtail opportunit­ies for graft and corruption,” he added.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has been pushing for the complete implementa­tion of the government digitaliza­tion program under his administra­tion, noting in his second State of the Nation Address in July last year that digitaliza­tion has significan­tly boosted efficiency in processes such as business registrati­on, issuance of permits and licenses, loan applicatio­ns, and revenue collection­s.

“Consistent with this transforma­tive policy direction, all government offices must then ensure that their vital services are digitalize­d immediatel­y. It is here. It is needed, and it is needed today. Government must fully embrace digitaliza­tion to provide better service to the people through its vital frontline services and its back-end functions,” Marcos said.

Based on data from the Berlinbase­d organizati­on Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, the Philippine­s obtained a score of 34 out of 100, which was an increase from its score of 33 in 2022.

The Philippine­s ranked 115th out of the 180 countries and territorie­s on the list, up from 116th.

Countries were scored based on perceived levels of public sector corruption, with 0 being “highly corrupt” and 100 being “very clean.”

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal said “each country’s score is a combinatio­n of at least three data sources drawn from 13 different corruption surveys and assessment­s.”

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