Corrupt officials
>> Saturday, February 9, 2019
EDITORIAL
If surveys are any
indication, corruption in government under this administration is still
prevalent. But there could be deterrents
to stop this practice among those in government. Among them is decent pay for
government workers.
The Singaporeans, whose
civil servants are reputed to be the highest paid in the world, tend to
validate this theory; the city-state consistently ranks at the top or at least
in the top five in international surveys on transparency and good governance.
How much compensation is
needed to deter corruption in the Philippine bureaucracy, however, remains to
be seen. The Duterte administration had implemented a hefty pay hike for
members of the Philippine National Police, with the chief getting a 79 percent
increase and others seeing their pay rise by up to 100 percent. The PNP
comptroller said the pay hike is a deterrent to corruption.
Previous studies have
shown that a number of PNP members still have no decent shelters and live below
the poverty line. President Duterte, who has shown a soft spot for the PNP, the
military and other security agencies, has been moving to improve the welfare of
those tasked to carry out his war against criminality and other threats to the
state.
A pay hike can best
deter corruption, however, if it is accompanied by institutional reforms as
well as the certainty that those who engage in graft will face the full force
of the law.
Even a 100 percent
increase in the take-home pay of a crooked cop may pale in comparison to the
amounts he can earn from extortion and shakedown operations.
In this developing
country, government funds are limited for everything including salaries and
benefits of civil servants. For the corrupt, however, working in government can
be a ticket to substantial wealth, especially for those in the higher echelons
of the bureaucracy. Even if the salaries of these crooked opportunists are
tripled, their legitimate earnings would be a pittance compared to the fat commissions
and grease money they receive from those who deal with their agencies.
Apart from ensuring that
such crooks are caught and punished, structural reforms are needed to
streamline procedures and plug opportunities for graft.
Corruption is committed
with impunity in this country based from
media reports and change will not
happen overnight. Better pay for government workers is one step that must be
accompanied by other measures to deter corruption.
But then, there are the
hardened ones. They want control in government so they can earn more. Despite
holding top positions, some still aspire for chairmanships in various
government organizations like regional or peace councils so they can have a say
and control over the moolah for their vested interests.
There is still no
sure-fire way to stop corruption in government. But one way is not to vote for
these shameless corrupt officials and candidates come May elections. When the
day of reckoning comes, they will realize that the higher they go up with their
corrupt ways, the harder they fall. And they will meet the people they trampled
upon on their way down.
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