Corruption
>> Saturday, August 28, 2021
EDITORIAL
The Philippines is getting a more corrupt and
less democratic state under President Rodrigo Duterte, according to recent
rankings published by international agencies.
The Philippines is the 113 least corrupt nation out of 180 countries, according to the 2019 Corruption Perceptions Index reported by Transparency International. That's 14 notches below the 2018 ranking and 18 down from 2015 before Duterte becomes President!
Meanwhile, the Philippines slid down one notch in the Economist Intelligence Unit's (EIU) Democracy Index for 2019, to 54th place.
That's on top of two notches it slid in 2018.
Rising corruption means that President Duterte's anti-corruption rhetoric that helped him grow in power was just that -- rhetoric, Panos Mourdoukoutas wrote on Forbes. He said attacks on media have undermined the country's democratic institutions, without helping the Philippines in the corruption front.
Growing corruption and faltering democratic institutions are endemic problems for most emerging market economies, according to the international groups. It's what keeps them from achieving sustainable growth and escaping poverty.
“Governments rise on the promise to drain the swamp of corruption of their predecessors and fall as they slide in the mire of their own corruption.
That's what has been the case in the Philippines where hard-working Filipinos remain poor, watching the people of other nations in the region getting rich. Revolutions of all colors and sorts come and go in the Philippines. Still, the old villains — corruption and political oppression — remain intact, preventing the country from developing modern infrastructure, attracting foreign capital, lowering unemployment, sustain economic growth, and escape poverty.”
There's a simple reason: every new regime uses the old mechanisms, which they had confronted before rising in office, to advance its interests rather than the interests of the masses.
The Philippines, analysts say, is a wealthy country both in natural resources and human resources. But it remains an emerging country. While its Gross Domestic Product per capita in reached a record of $3002 in 2018, they say, it's still 24% below the world's average; and well below the per capita GDP of neighboring countries.
This, as reports of corruption in the Philippines are a daily fare with elections only around 10 months away. The outcome of the electoral exercise will determine the fate of this country.
The Philippines is the 113 least corrupt nation out of 180 countries, according to the 2019 Corruption Perceptions Index reported by Transparency International. That's 14 notches below the 2018 ranking and 18 down from 2015 before Duterte becomes President!
Meanwhile, the Philippines slid down one notch in the Economist Intelligence Unit's (EIU) Democracy Index for 2019, to 54th place.
That's on top of two notches it slid in 2018.
Rising corruption means that President Duterte's anti-corruption rhetoric that helped him grow in power was just that -- rhetoric, Panos Mourdoukoutas wrote on Forbes. He said attacks on media have undermined the country's democratic institutions, without helping the Philippines in the corruption front.
Growing corruption and faltering democratic institutions are endemic problems for most emerging market economies, according to the international groups. It's what keeps them from achieving sustainable growth and escaping poverty.
“Governments rise on the promise to drain the swamp of corruption of their predecessors and fall as they slide in the mire of their own corruption.
That's what has been the case in the Philippines where hard-working Filipinos remain poor, watching the people of other nations in the region getting rich. Revolutions of all colors and sorts come and go in the Philippines. Still, the old villains — corruption and political oppression — remain intact, preventing the country from developing modern infrastructure, attracting foreign capital, lowering unemployment, sustain economic growth, and escape poverty.”
There's a simple reason: every new regime uses the old mechanisms, which they had confronted before rising in office, to advance its interests rather than the interests of the masses.
The Philippines, analysts say, is a wealthy country both in natural resources and human resources. But it remains an emerging country. While its Gross Domestic Product per capita in reached a record of $3002 in 2018, they say, it's still 24% below the world's average; and well below the per capita GDP of neighboring countries.
This, as reports of corruption in the Philippines are a daily fare with elections only around 10 months away. The outcome of the electoral exercise will determine the fate of this country.
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