The government estimates that as much as 70 per cent of flood-control funds may have been lost to corruption in recent years. That translates into over 100 billion pesos ( around $1.7 billion ) a year in wasted or stolen public money
There was a time when the Philippines was one of Asia’s success stories. In the 1960s, it was second only to Japan in wealth. The peso was strong; one US dollar was equivalent to two pesos. Today, one dollar buys nearly 60 pesos. The reasons are many, but corruption sits at the heart of the decline.
The latest scandal involving government contractor Sara Discaya has once again exposed how deeply corruption runs and how costly it has become for the economy and ordinary citizens.
Who is Sara Discaya?
Sara Discaya built a business empire by winning government contracts, especially flood-control projects meant to protect towns from typhoons and heavy rains. Over the years, her companies secured projects across several provinces, often worth hundreds of millions of pesos.
She was often showcased as a success story, a self-made entrepreneur who rose through hard work. But behind the scenes, her name regularly came up in whispers about inflated costs, political connections and questionable projects.
Those whispers are now part of a formal criminal case.
What are the charges?
Investigators say Discaya and several government officials approved payments for projects that were either poorly built or did not exist at all. The money, meant to prevent flooding and save lives, ended up in private pockets.
What sets this case apart is its sheer scale. The government estimates that as much as 70 per cent of flood-control funds may have been lost to corruption in recent years. That translates into over 100 billion pesos ( around $1.7 billion) a year in wasted or stolen public money.
These were funds meant to protect communities from floods and typhoons. Instead, some projects existed only on paper. Others were poorly built and quickly fell apart.
The consequences have been deadly. When Typhoon Kalmaegi hit the Visayas late last year, nearly 200 people were killed and millions were affected. Poor or missing flood-control infrastructure made the damage worse.
Discaya now faces serious corruption and graft charges. Some of these cases are non-bailable, meaning the court considers them severe enough that the accused cannot walk free while trials are ongoing.
Discaya has denied wrongdoing and pleaded not guilty.
Economic damage is mounting
Philippines’ economic growth slowed to 4 per cent in the third quarter, the weakest in four years. The government has cut its growth targets for 2026 and 2027. While stock markets across Asia rose, the Philippine stock index ended 2025 in the red.
Foreign investors are taking note. Data from the central bank shows foreign direct investment fell nearly 40 per cent year-on-year in October. Investors worry that weak governance makes business risky and unpredictable.
Credit ratings have not yet been downgraded, but rating agencies have warned that governance failures and social unrest pose serious risks.
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has described corruption as a “cancer” that requires “major surgery”. He has ordered lifestyle checks on officials and cut billions of dollars in spending vulnerable to abuse.
But critics say these steps are not enough.
What Filipinos want to see is accountability, arrests, prosecutions and convictions, especially of powerful people. With prominent families implicated, including figures close to the political elite, the real test will be whether the law applies equally to all.
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