WHAT IS THE CORRELATION OF DYSFUNCTION TO CORRUPTION?
WHAT IS THE CORRELATION OF DYSFUNCTION TO CORRUPTION?
We keep seeing it in our country: broken promises, half-built roads, interminable queues at public offices, and the ever-looming suspicion that money meant for the public good ended up somewhere else. In the Philippines, there is indeed a definite correlation between dysfunction and corruption—but the real question is: why don’t we always see that link clearly? And once we do, how can we break the vicious cycle?
But why don’t we see it?
What makes dysfunction and corruption intertwined but hidden from plain view? I suggest three reasons: first, because dysfunction is often seen as “just how things are” rather than a symptom of something deeper; second, because corruption thrives where dysfunction has already set in; and third, because the relationship isn’t always linear, making it easier to blame one side rather than look at them both.
What could make us see it?
We’ll start seeing it when we shift our lens: from looking at isolated delays or scandals, to seeing the structural patterns. For example, the latest Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index shows the Philippines scored 34 out of 100 in 2023, ranking 115th of 180 countries. That low score is a reflection of the corruption side. But what about the dysfunctional side? When public services consistently fail, when institutions overlap yet don’t coordinate, when bureaucratic delays are the norm, that dysfunction is the fertile ground for corruption.
Is it cause and effect? Does dysfunction cause corruption—or the other way around?
My view: it is both. There’s a cycle rather than a single-direction arrow.
Corruption → dysfunction
When public funds are siphoned off, the resources for actually delivering services disappear.
Appointments based on favoritism rather than merit degrade performance.
Oversight bodies compromised by graft cannot enforce laws effectively. Thus, corruption cripples the service capacity.
Dysfunction → more corruption
When processes are opaque, paperwork multiple layered, approvals unclear, then opportunities for bribes flourish.
Citizens lose trust and stop demanding accountability, so impunity grows.
Agencies working in silos with weak mandates provide cover for irregularities.
Thus, dysfunction creates the breeding ground for corruption.
So yes: it is a cycle—and unless we intervene on both sides, the loop repeats.
Why are public services in the Philippines always broken?
Here’s what lies behind every delay, every excuse, every broken promise:
Root causes of dysfunction
Fragmented, politicized bureaucracy: Agencies often have overlapping mandates and unclear authority. Reform is resisted.
Corruption and patronage: Key positions and contracts are awarded on loyalty, not competence.
Weak rule of law: Even when laws are decent, enforcement is inconsistent and skewed.
Underinvestment and misallocation: Budgets exist—but funds get diverted into ghost projects or padded contracts.
Lack of citizen-centred design: Processes built for the agency, not the user; outcome: long queues, inefficiency.
Why promises keep failing
Short-termism: Politicians chase big visible projects over systemic reforms.
Poor continuity: Each administration launches new programs; many die when leadership changes.
Tokenism: New slogans, portals, task forces—but little bite into structures.
How can we stop the cycle?
Here are concrete suggestions:
Institutional re-engineering: Clarify mandates, merge overlapping agencies, create performance-based systems.
Community-led monitoring: Empower citizens to track budgets, report abuse, help design services.
Digital transparency with teeth: Real-time data, audit trails, citizen dashboards—not just nice websites.
Merit-based appointments & career service reform: Depoliticise the bureaucracy, invest in training.
Target both dysfunction and corruption simultaneously: Because fixing one without the other limits impact.
Do we need our own “DOGE”?
In the U.S., there is the Department of Government Efficiency (abbreviated DOGE). Created by executive order in January 2025, its goal: modernise federal technology, maximise productivity and cut waste in the U.S. federal government.
Don’t we need something like that here in the Philippines? A strong, independent agency that focuses on both government efficiency and anti-corruption in one package? I believe yes. Because when dysfunction and corruption are two sides of the same coin, isolating one does not fix the problem.
Can we combine anti-corruption czar + pro-efficiency czar into one?
Absolutely. Instead of having one agency chasing corruption, and another chasing efficiency, we need a unified model: one agency empowered to both reduce waste, streamline processes and detect, investigate and prosecute corruption. The synergy matters. Efficiency mechanisms reduce the space for corruption; anti-corruption mechanisms improve functioning systems.
What are the best examples in the world?
Countries with strong integrity frameworks (Nordic countries) show us that high efficiency and low corruption go hand-in-hand.
Digital governance models (Estonia, Singapore) show how processes and transparency can reduce graft.
Some budget-tracking/blockchain pilots (although not yet big in the Philippines) show promise: fewer manual steps = fewer opportunities for bribes.
The correlation between dysfunction and corruption in the Philippines is not just strong—it’s cyclical and self-reinforcing. Corruption degrades service delivery, which makes systems dysfunctional, which then creates new opportunities for corruption. We often fail to see this because we treat each delay or scandal in isolation. But what we need is holistic reform: one that tears down the walls of dysfunction and builds up the structures of integrity and efficiency.
If we ever want services that actually work—schools that educate, roads that last, health systems that heal—then we can no longer ignore the root causes. We need transparency not just as a slogan, but as a plumbing: the pipes through which our public money flows. We need merit not only as an ideal, but as the rule for every hiring. We need oversight not only in law, but in the lived experience of citizens.
And yes—it is time we ask: why don’t we have our own DOGE? One agency that says loud and clear: “Efficiency matters. Integrity matters. The two are inseparable.” Because without that, we’re doomed to spin forever in the same broken cycle.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com
senseneres.blogspot.com 05-05-2026/09088877282
