OPINION

Fighting corruption a shared responsibility

Integrity must become the standard, not the exception.

Margarita Gutierrez

Corruption in the Philippines is often framed as a failure of government — lax law enforcement, weak courts, entrenched patronage. While these are real, this narrative misses a crucial point: Corruption is systemic, and it survives not only because of public officials, but also because of private actors who enable, tolerate, or benefit from it.

For decades, anti-corruption efforts have focused almost entirely on the public sector. New laws, new commissions, new promises. Yet corruption persists, thriving as it does at the delicate intersection of public power and private interest. Bribery, bid-rigging, and opaque procurement do not exist in a vacuum; they require willing participants on both sides to happen. When businesses quietly accept these practices as the “cost of doing business,” corruption is normalized and governance suffers.

This is why a whole-of-nation approach is no longer optional but mandatory. The private sector is not — and never has been — a bystander in the fight against corruption. In fact, it is a central player. Ethical business conduct can either reinforce accountability or quietly dismantle it.

What is sure is that choosing integrity disrupts corrupt systems; choosing silence sustains them.

Strong private-sector anti-corruption programs are moral statements. They are also strategic investments. Companies that prioritize transparency and accountability earn market trust, attract investors, and operate in more stable environments. But while integrity strengthens markets, just as surely, corruption weakens them.

Global standards already recognize this reality. As a signatory to the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC), the Philippines is committed to promoting private-sector integrity through internal controls, compliance systems, and transparent accounting. These principles align with OECD anti-bribery standards and ASEAN integrity frameworks, reinforcing the idea that ethical business is essential to sustainable growth.

As the Philippines hosts ASEAN this year, it will have a timely opportunity to push the conversation further. Anti-corruption efforts must expand beyond government reform and into business boardrooms, supply chains, and corporate decision-making. Elevating private-sector integrity as a regional priority would signal real leadership — and serious intent.

Encouragingly, integrity pledges and compliance initiatives are gaining ground among business groups and civil society members. But these efforts must go beyond lip service and symbolism. Anti-corruption cannot live solely in compliance manuals, but must be embedded in corporate culture, leadership choices, and everyday operations.

Government enforcement remains critical. So do related measures like whistleblower protection. But expecting the state to fight corruption alone is both unrealistic and ineffective.

Corruption is a shared problem — and fighting it demands shared responsibility.

If the Philippines is serious about getting rid of corruption, the private sector must move from passive compliance to being a proactive actor. Integrity must become the standard, not the exception. Only then can we build institutions and markets worthy of public trust.