PHL woos US aid agency after getting low marks in scorecard
THE Philippines on Friday defended the Duterte administration鈥檚 efforts to combat graft, after the country failed to meet the standards in fighting corruption and upholding the rule of law in a new scorecard issued by the US government鈥檚 Millennium Challenge Corp. (MCC).
In the MCC Scorecard for fiscal year 2018, the Philippines did not meet the performance standard for 鈥渃ontrol of corruption鈥 with a score of 0, and 鈥渞ule of law鈥 with a score of -0.01. Both were the median or threshold scores for the country鈥檚 income group.
鈥淭he Philippines remains firmly committed to the rule of law and strictly adheres to due process. The President has also made clear that his platform of government will be based on zero tolerance for corruption in government,鈥 Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez said in a statement on Friday.
Mr. Dominguez also noted there were 鈥渋nherent time lags鈥 in the third-party data used by the MCC in its scorecard. He pointed out the country鈥檚 score in control of corruption and rule of law were based on the aggregation of quantitative assessments and perception surveys collected by the World Bank in partnership with Brookings Institution in 2016.
鈥淲e have been informed that we are at the median level in these two indicators, which we believe we can improve as we work together with the MCC to enlighten them about our effective efforts to weed out corruption in the Philippine bureaucracy,鈥 he said.
Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr. said the MCC鈥檚 ratings 鈥渕ay not completely reflect the reform initiatives of the Duterte administration in the area of fighting corruption and good governance.鈥
The government is hoping to convince MCC to resume its development assistance to the Philippines, after a five-year grant worth $433 million expired in May 2016.
鈥淭he scorecards are only one of the factors that the MCC Board takes into consideration when making re-selection decisions. We are confident that the Board will take into consideration relevant information and recent data on our very deliberate efforts to improve the 鈥榗ontrol of corruption and adherence to the 鈥榬ule of law,鈥 indicators,鈥 Mr. Dominguez said.
As examples, the Finance chief said Mr. Duterte 鈥渃leansed the corruption-plagued Bureau of Corrections,鈥 and created the Presidential Anti-Corruption Commission to investigate cases of corruption involving presidential appointees.
The MCC uses the scorecard to determine if a country is eligible for development assistance. The publication of the scorecard is the third in a four-stage selection process which starts with the identification of candidate countries, followed by the publication of MCC鈥檚 selection criteria and methodology report.
The final stage takes place in December when the MCC board of directors select the countries deemed eligible for development assistance.
鈥淚n determining country eligibility, the Board considers three factors: A country鈥檚 performance on the indicators; the opportunity to reduce poverty and generate economic growth within a country; and availability of funds,鈥 the MCC said in its website.
The Philippines鈥 previous MCC grant was not renewed last December. At that time, US embassy spokesperson Molly Koscina said this 鈥渞eflects the Board鈥檚 significant concerns around rule of law and civil liberties in the Philippines.鈥
Mr. Duterte has previously lashed out at the United States and then President Barack Obama for criticizing his war against drugs, which has claimed over 3,900 lives since he took office on June 30, 2016. 鈥 K.A.N.Vidal


