When I learned that Senate President Tito Sotto filed a bill on “Rightsizing the Government," I instantly found myself contemplating a simple thought: if the government were a corporation, would it have survived this long? In the private world, I have seen departments quietly dissolved, not because people were cruel, but because numbers do not lie. When a unit duplicates another’s function, when it drains resources without clear output, it is called what it truly is: a "Cost Center." And in a world where survival depends on discipline, that cost center is either fixed or removed. No emotions, no politics, just accountability. But then I look at our government, and I pause, because outside, in the real world, I see Filipino families doing what the government itself seems unwilling to do.
I see fathers calculating every liter of gasoline before starting their engines, mothers stretching budgets that no longer stretch, and children learning too early that not everything can be afforded anymore. These are quiet sacrifices, invisible struggles, and a daily discipline born not from choice but from necessity. And yet, somewhere within the halls of governance, that same sense of urgency feels distant. There are agencies that mirror each other, offices that overlap, and functions that intersect without clarity. What should have been a coordinated system becomes something else—a slow, heavy structure where duplication replaces direction. I do not even need to name them, because those who are watching and thinking already know where these redundancies lie.
I remember conversations about the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict. On paper, it sounds right—a whole-of-government approach, a unified response. And I wanted to believe in it; I still do in principle, but as I reflect deeper, I cannot help but ask whether we are strengthening the system or simply adding another layer that blurs responsibility. When the Armed Forces, the Police, and civilian agencies already carry similar mandates, the creation of another structure raises questions not of intention, but of design. Sometimes the problem is not what we want to achieve, but how we choose to organize ourselves to achieve it.
And this realization does not stop there. Across the broader architecture of government, I see overlaps that have quietly become normal. Within the Office of the President, the Department of Social Welfare and Development, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, and other institutions, programs converge toward similar goals: inclusive economic development, community upliftment, environmental stewardship, and disaster response; yet they operate through separate structures, separate funding streams, and separate lines of authority. What is presented as coordination sometimes becomes duplication, and what is meant to be collaboration occasionally turns into silent competition among agencies that are supposed to serve the same people.
But beyond duplication lies something heavier, something more painful than confronting corruption. If redundancy is what we can see, corruption is what we feel but cannot always trace. It is the quiet bleeding of a system that was meant to protect us. It thrives in complexity, hides in overlapping mandates, and survives in spaces where accountability is weak. Duplication does not only waste resources; it creates opportunities for abuse. More layers mean more discretion, and more discretion, when left unchecked, becomes fertile ground for corruption to grow. Every peso lost is not just a number; it is a classroom never built, a hospital bed never delivered, or a relief good that never reached a family waiting in silence after a storm. What makes it more painful is not just the loss, but the familiarity of it, the quiet acceptance that this is how things are.
I sometimes think of the Filipino taxpayer as a silent shareholder of this Republic, investing not for profit but for hope, expecting that what is given will return as service, as protection, as opportunity. Yet many are left wondering where that investment truly goes. In such a system, taxation begins to lose its moral meaning. It no longer feels like participation in nation-building but a burden carried to sustain both inefficiency and corruption. Trust, once broken, is not easily restored, and what is at stake is not only money but also dignity.
This is why I believe reform is no longer optional. Not the kind that is spoken in speeches or written in reports, but the kind that requires difficult and sometimes uncomfortable decisions. Streamlining, integration, and the courage to question whether certain structures should continue to exist must become part of governance. Programs like the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict must be assessed not politically, but functionally, and if their objectives can be achieved more effectively within existing institutions, then we must have the courage to act. The same must be done across all departments where duplication quietly persists, because in the end, structure matters, and clarity of purpose determines effectiveness.
But even more than structure, integrity remains the foundation. Without integrity, even the most well-designed system will fail. Without accountability, authority becomes abuse. And without moral leadership, governance becomes hollow, existing in form but failing in purpose. The Filipino people are not asking for perfection; they are asking for fairness. They are not demanding grand promises; they are asking for honesty. They are not seeking ideals; they are seeking proof that their sacrifices mean something.
And now, more than ever, when every peso carries the weight of survival, when every expense is calculated, when every day is a quiet act of endurance, the government must learn what the people already know: that discipline is not optional, that efficiency is not negotiable, and that integrity is not a slogan but a responsibility. Because beyond survival lies a deeper aspiration, not just to endure, but to finally live under a government that is lean, accountable, and worthy of the trust that the Filipino people continue to give, even when it is hardest to do so.
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