Position Paper About Graft and Corruption
Position Paper About Graft and Corruption
Position Paper About Graft and Corruption
INTRODUCTION
office for private gain (World Bank, 1997, UNDP, 1999). It can come in various
forms and a wide array of illicit behavior, such as bribery, extortion, fraud,
aspects of governance, such as political parties, private business sector, and NGO
usually found in societies observing strong ethics and morals in public service.
become a way of life, a goal, and an outlook towards public office. Corruption in
the government involves three broad layers. First is corruption within the broader
political system. This includes the demands of electoral politics, the extensive use
funds. Second, is corruption within the public sector, which is usually focused on
three major problems: spotty performance of mechanisms for identifying and
syndicates and millions of pesos); and petty corruption (which involves smaller
amounts of money, such as grease money to facilitate the delivery of goods and
also come in the form of future benefits. With this type of corruption, the boundary
between a corrupt and a non-corrupt behavior becomes quite thin. Take for
instance the act of giving a gift to a public official as a token of appreciation for
services done. In some cultures, this may be ethically condoned. Laws and
and employees. Despite this law, however, gift giving is still practiced as this habit
rule of law had good foundations, but were eroded by a personalistic political
system and ambiguous policies in the past which allowed too much discretion
incentives for corruption. The martial law years further weakened institutions in
considered to be the worst among East Asia’s leading economies and the country
has sunk even lower among those seen to be lagging in governance reforms. The
International, showed that the situation in the country had improved slightly but
still remained serious. The Philippines ranked 3rd among 180 countries included in
the index, up from its previous 141st ranking in 2008. The nation scored 2.4 in the
and the Baltic state of Belarus. Corruption exists in all levels of the government,
end result of the politics of privilege, rent seeking and clientelism. (Hutchcroft:
corrupt regime. Corruption creates a cycle that would make sure that benefits are
concentrated on these small sector of the populace. It can also be explained by the
principal-agent theory of Jensen and Meckling (1976). The agents (in this case, the
politicians and bureaucrats) are able to abuse the advantages offered by such
discretionary power in the wake of the incoherent interest of the principal (in this
case, the electorate or the public at large). In the Philippines, this incoherence is
partly the result of social divisions (e.g. ethnolinguistic dimensions, religion and
urban-rural distinctions), and economic divisions (the huge gap between the rich
investment levels of almost 5 per cent less than a relatively uncorrupt country and
to lose about half a percentage point of gross domestic product per year. It is also
investment. High levels of corruption reduce economic growth. It can distort the
pervasive and troubling impact on the poor, since it distorts public choices in favor
of the wealthy and powerful, and reduces the state’s capacity to provide social
and transitional economies. Among the identified effects of a corrupt regime are:
public projects that will maximize bribery receipts and minimize the chance of
detection
• Lower opportunities for farmers to sell their produce and for SMEs to flourish, as
their ability to escape poverty using their livelihood will be severely restricted by
CONCLUSION
involving different countries have shown that the more corrupt a government, the
more underdeveloped the country becomes. (UNDP 2004) Poverty becomes more
rampant, social services are reduced and investments in infrastructure and social
just a governance deficit, but also an amputation of democratic values and human
mechanisms. When these formal and informal institutions break down, laws and
harder to implement. The Philippine experience showed that ruling groups, at their
certain areas of decision making off limits to scrutiny and intervention. Hence, it is
in place such that any actions that may undermine accountability are immediately
element of reform. Moreover, since this issue is connected with the quality of
leaders the country has, it is important that the anti-corruption effort is centered
towards political reform and democratization. In the Philippines, one of the root
take all system of elections. Policies that will neutralize this system should be
leadership and able management skills to implement the programs and sustain the
reforms focused not only on achieving efficiency and effectiveness, but also
instilling a culture of rules in the system. Lesson can be learned from Thai anti-
need for political will to implement this. Second, this will can be generated by
popular pressure. We cannot expect the bureaucrats and politicians who benefit
from the political system to reform themselves. Third, the public must be educated
to exert moral and political pressure to outlaw corruption. The mobilization of such
public office and public service and a more widespread awareness of the social