I CANNOT take the hypocrisy and injustice of our government officials in demanding fiscal discipline from our citizens while our political leaders themselves are engaging in corrupt practices right in front of us.
This is not just about whether or not 500 pesos is enough for noche buena for a family of four this Christmas. This is about the deeper moral dimensions of resource allocation, accountability, and democratic principles.
This ethical tension between demanding austerity from citizens while officials engage in corruption represents a fundamental breakdown of the social contract. It creates a system where the burdens and benefits of public resources are distributed unjustly, eroding the very principles of fairness and accountability that legitimate government requires.
To illustrate this ethical imbalance clearly, let us compare and contrast the parallel realities for citizens and officials under a corrupt system.
In terms of fiscal responsibility, ordinary citizens are expected to make ends meet with limited budget (noche buena for 500 pesos only). On top of that, they face cuts to essential services like healthcare and social services. Meanwhile, public funds are misallocated or extracted for private gain, distorting budgets away from public goods.
In terms of accountability and consequence, ordinary citizens are strictly accountable, automatic deduction (hello, withholding tax), no excuses and with swift punishment. Executive Secretary Ralph Recto is “strongly reminding” the Filipino people of their “heroic duty to pay the right taxes promptly” while officials operate with impunity and corrupt politicians escape responsibility.
As for access and influence, ordinary citizens are marginalized with little to no influence on policy. Their voices diluted by the dominance of the economic elite and foreign interests, who gain disproportionate access and sway over policy decisions through contributions and lobbying.
Ordinary citizens’ trust in our government has completely eroded due to perceived unfairness of a rigged system, leading to civic disengagement. Our system is undermined by conflicts of interest, where officials’ financial stakes influence government actions.
This double standard creates several interconnected ethical violations.
It directly harms citizen welfare. Corruption redirects resources from public services to private pockets. When combined with austerity budgets, the impact is severe. Exhibit A is the 2024 transfer of PhilHealth funds to the national treasury to finance “unprogrammed appropriations” (the new version of pork barrel funds). Meanwhile, corruption siphons off funds needed for health and other essential social services, violating the ethical obligation to protect society’s most vulnerable.
It erodes democratic governance. Corruption perverts core democratic functions. It creates a “pay-to-play” system where policy responds to the economic elite who contributes to the politicians’ campaign funds rather than the public good. This is often sustained by weakening the checks and balances designed to prevent it, transforming institutions from public safeguards into tools for maintaining power and privilege.
It violates public trust. The social contract is broken when leaders exempt themselves from the sacrifices they demand of citizens. This hypocrisy fuels deep public cynicism. And when people feel that the system is rigged, they disengage from public life, making government less representative and responsive. This loss of trust is the most corrosive long-term effect.
Citizens should not bear the burden of sacrifice in a corrupt system because the sacrifice is unjust, ineffective, and perpetuates the very corruption causing the hardship.
Citizens are the victims, not the cause, of corruption. Demanding their sacrifice is akin to blaming victims for a crime committed against them. The moral responsibility lies with those abusing power.
Governance is based on a reciprocal agreement — citizens contribute (paying taxes, following laws) in exchange for security, justice, and public goods. Corruption unilaterally breaks this contract by diverting public resources for private gain, absolving the government of its duty to protect citizens’ welfare.
Austerity imposed on citizens does not fix budgetary holes created by corruption; it merely shifts costs onto the most vulnerable. Corruption distorts the entire economy, inflating costs (through kickbacks), deterring honest investment, and ensuring any sacrifice by citizens is consumed by a leaky system rather than building public wealth.
The political disenfranchisement of ordinary citizens means elite capture of our government, which responds to private bribes, not public need. When citizens sacrifice while watching connected elites profit, it signals that their voice and vote have been rendered meaningless. The erosion of democracy itself.
We must refuse to accept the premise that citizens must “tighten their belts” to compensate for corrupt theft because it creates a dangerous, self-perpetuating cycle.
Step one, corruption siphons public funds. Step two, the resulting budget shortfall or economic crisis is framed as a problem of public overspending. Step three, austerity policies (cuts to services and subsidies) are imposed on the general population. Step four, this public sacrifice normalizes the crisis, masks the root cause (corruption), and reduces the pressure on government leaders to reform. Step five, with less accountability, corruption continues and worsens, leading back to step one.
In this cycle, citizen sacrifice does not solve anything. It only acts as a political pressure release valve that allows a corrupt system to remain stable.
The solution is not for citizens to make sacrifices, but to insist that the burden of adjustment falls on the corrupt system itself.
The government can start by recovering stolen assets and illicit funds. Eliminating wasteful contracts awarded through kickbacks. Ensuring the wealthy and connected pay their lawful share of taxes. Reprioritizing the budget away from corrupt patronage projects and toward essential public services.
A system that asks for unilateral sacrifice from its citizens to cover the costs of its own corruption is not merely unfair — it is a form of systemic theft and political abuse. The rightful demand is for the system to reform and bear the cost of its own malfeasance.
The obligation for reform must lie within the government and its institutions, not with citizens adjusting to systemic failure. Hindi ang mamamayan ang dapat mag-adjust, ang gobyerno ang dapat tumino. That is what “Bagong Pilipinas” should be .