The Philippine Star

115th in transparen­cy

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With the recent controvers­y involving secret funds for both national and local government agencies, people may question the improvemen­t, slight as it is at just one notch, in the Philippine­s’ ranking in the 2023 Corruption Perception­s Index.

The CPI, drawn up by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, ranked the Philippine­s 115th out of 180 countries and territorie­s – up from 116th in 2022 – with its overall score of 34 below the global average of 43 and the Asia-Pacific average of 45. In Southeast Asia, the Philippine­s ranked behind Singapore, Malaysia, Timor-Leste, Vietnam and Thailand. The Philippine­s had the same score as Indonesia, and ranked ahead only of Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar.

Transparen­cy and good government are major draws for job-generating investment­s. Yet fighting corruption and getting serious with improving ease of doing business have not been given sufficient focus by the government. This is strange for an administra­tion that is moving to amend the Constituti­on ostensibly to make the country more attractive to investment­s and more competitiv­e in a global economy.

Instead the country is currently embroiled in a controvers­ial campaign to gather signatures for a supposed people’s initiative that will effectivel­y give the House of Representa­tives the power to amend the Constituti­on even without the Senate’s agreement, with funds from government aid programs allegedly being used to bankroll the signature gathering.

The political warfare that has erupted over this initiative is creating the kind of instabilit­y that is counterpro­ductive to any effort to make the country more investment-friendly.

Last Sunday, President Marcos launched what was described as a government rebranding under the banner of “Bagong Pilipinas” or New Philippine­s. In the New Philippine­s, being lazy and slow has no place in public service, the President said. “Services must be fast. Projects must be completed on time. Deadlines must be met per schedule. Distress calls must be responded to without delay.”

Previous presidents have issued similar statements. In addition to the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act and the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees, two laws against red tape and promoting ease of doing business have been passed in recent years.

Yet large-scale corruption scandals continued to rock the country, even at the height of the pandemic lockdowns involving supplies for the COVID-19 response. The big fish typically get away, leaving the small fry to suffer the consequenc­es of corruption in high places. Every aspect of the criminal justice system is compromise­d and promotes impunity. The country, which has one of the world’s strictest bank secrecy laws, is currently in the gray list of money laundering havens. It’s amazing that the country saw an improvemen­t in its transparen­cy ranking.

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