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7 years ago

How to fight corruption - the Philippines example

President Rodrigo Duterte discusses matters with Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III during the 19th Cabinet meeting in Malacañang on October 0 4, 2017. 	—Courtesy: Malacañang photo
President Rodrigo Duterte discusses matters with Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III during the 19th Cabinet meeting in Malacañang on October 0 4, 2017. —Courtesy: Malacañang photo

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Despite opposition, President Duterte's Anti-Corruption Commission is vital in light of Philippine history and international experience. To be effective, the anti-corruption agency must be independent.

On October 04, President Duterte signed Executive Order 4 creating the Presidential Anti-Corruption Commission (PACC). The Commission is mandated "to directly assist the President in investigating and/or hearing administrative cases primarily involving graft and/or corruption against all presidential appointees."

Opposition has renounced the PACC as "unconstitutional", "redundant" and "afflicted with congenital infirmity." While some critics have expressed legitimate concerns, others may have a more self-interested agenda.

Yet, the fact remains that the Philippines ranks 101st in the current Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), well behind China, India and Indonesia. Clearly, there is a reason for a strong and different anti-corruption initiative. The former is critical for effectiveness; the latter is vital because other efforts have failed.

In light of historical and international evidence, the effort to raise living standards in the Philippines is not viable without a broad and deep anti-corruption initiative.

HISTORICAL REALITIES: When the Ramos era ended in the late 1990s, average Philippine per capita income was about $3,100, which meant 112th rank in the world.  In the corruption index, its score (3.3) was one of the lowest worldwide.

During the Estrada rule, per capita income grew to $3,600 but, after a hopeful start, the country fell further in the Index. In the Arroyo era, per capita income climbed to more than $5,500 but corruption remained widespread and got worse in the subsequent political turmoil.

In 2010, President Aquino began his term with a stated anti-corruption campaign. Barely three years later, the Inquirer cited his speech at the World Economic Forum: "Anti-corruption programme [is] now bearing fruits." In May 2016 - on the eve of the presidential election - the Rappler headlined: "PH anti-corruption drive most improved," relying on consultant experience of 16 countries.

Yet, in light of the global corruption index, Aquino's mid-term showed only slight improvement as the Index initially climbed to the Estrada-era level, only to fall further back at Ramos-era figures. So after two decades and much talk about progress, the Philippines corruption score was where it had been in the late 1990s - as if nothing had happened.

If anything, corruption moved to an entirely new level as drugs proliferated from shantytowns to chic clubs as the Philippines became a transshipment hub for drug syndicates operating in East Asia and cooperating with Mexico's Sinaloa cartel. When Duterte warned about the coming of a "narco-state" during his campaign, that was bypassed as political propaganda until abundant evidence became available about the spread of narco-money.

Corruption, poverty, illicit finance and bribery tend to go hand in hand.

INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE: Today, Singapore is one of the world's most attractive destinations, clean and wealthy, known for its strict rule of law.  Yet, in the post-war era, corruption was rampant in the city-state.

In 1952, the British colonial government created the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) at the Attorney-General's Chambers. Yet, not much happened until Singapore attained self-government in 1959, when Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew moved the CPIB into his office so that it would be independent from the police force and other government agencies. 

Today, Singapore ranks 5th in the global corruption index; well ahead of Canada, Germany, and the UK.

Hong Kong learned from Singapore. In the 1970s, it was still widely considered one of the most corrupt cities in the world.  Reforms came only after huge protests, which led to the launch of the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC), with wide investigative and executive powers and answerable to only the Governor, Hong Kong, unlike the old police Anti-Corruption Branch.

Today Hong Kong is 15th in the corruption index; before Japan, US and France.

Upon taking office in the early 2010s, China's President Xi Jinping pledged to crack down on "tigers and flies." The anti-corruption campaign has been executed largely under the direction of Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), and its smart and tough secretary Wang Qishan, along with corresponding judicial and military bodies. The CCDI has gone after both high-level officials and lower-level civil servants; from former military leaders, such as Xu Caihou and Guo Boxiong, and former politburo member Zhou Yongkang to Chongqing's former party chief Bo Xilai.

As of 2016, the Chinese campaign had 'netted' over 120 high-ranking officials, including about a dozen high-ranking military officers, several senior executives of state-owned companies, and five national leaders.

THE LESSONS: Ordinary people appreciate anti-corruption initiatives. Today, one of the most popular TV dramas in China is "In the Name of People." Its plot revolves around a prosecutor's effort to unearth corruption in a present-day fictional Chinese city.

But there are other common denominators in successful anti-graft campaigns. In each case - Singapore, Hong Kong and China - many talked a lot about corruption. Yet, anti-corruption struggle became effective only when leaders executed a truly independent campaign against graft.

In each case, critics initially accused the anti-corruption campaign for political purges, personal vendettas and economic destabilisation. In reality, the latter often proved to be a pretext for an effort by corrupt officials not to get caught and to retain looted funds and illicit economic privileges.

In each case, too, not much success was achieved until truly untouchable officials took charge of the campaign, while reporting directly and only to the nation's leader.  The Philippines is no different. After two decades of anti-graft rhetoric, an effective initiative requires independent leadership that must target both "tigers and flies," and report directly to the country's chief executive.

In the long-term, corruption, left unpunished, will doom all branches of government, including state, society and church, even police and military - as evidenced by the recent Philippines history as well.

What the Philippines needs is a tough but humane, independent but responsive, broad but deep anti-corruption initiative. Without such a campaign, even rapid growth will only mean polarisation and poverty to most Filipinos.

Dr Steinbock is the founder of the Difference Group and has served as the research director at the India, China, and America Institute (USA) and a visiting fellow at the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore).

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