Dr. John’s Wishful is a blog where stories, struggles, and hopes for a better nation come alive. It blends personal reflections with social commentary, turning everyday experiences into insights on democracy, unity, and integrity. More than critique, it is a voice of hope—reminding readers that words can inspire change, truth can challenge power, and dreams can guide Filipinos toward a future of justice and nationhood.

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Balancing Reform, Trust, and Structure: Rethinking Governance, Taxation, and the Constitutional Order

*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM



I remember a conversation during an online Focus Group Discussion hosted by the Universidad de Episcopalia, a registered online university in the State of Delaware, where I had the privilege of serving as moderator. The session brought together seventeen public officials from across Europe, Asia, Africa, and the United States, each offering perspectives shaped by their own governance realities. Among them was a Retired City Treasurer from a city in California who, after years in public service, spoke with quiet clarity: “We don’t just need more money—we need better systems, and we need both at the same time.” That insight captured, in a single moment, the central challenge of modern public finance. The debate is often framed as a choice between fixing governance systems or increasing taxation, yet what became evident in that global exchange was that sustainable development does not arise from choosing one over the other, but from achieving a careful equilibrium among system reform, good governance, and taxation.



The prevailing narrative that governments must “fix the system first before raising taxes” is grounded in legitimate concerns about inefficiency and corruption. However, taken in isolation, this principle risks oversimplifying a more complex fiscal reality. Governments operate in dynamic environments where immediate needs—healthcare, infrastructure, disaster response, and national security—require adequate and timely funding. Waiting for perfect governance before mobilizing additional revenue may delay critical interventions. Conversely, increasing taxes without addressing systemic inefficiencies undermines public trust and weakens fiscal effectiveness. The challenge, therefore, is not sequencing alone, but synchronization.


The contrast often drawn between reform-oriented leadership, such as Vico Sotto, and tax-driven fiscal strategies associated with policymakers like Ralph Recto illustrates this tension. Yet, a deeper analysis reveals that both approaches represent necessary components of a broader fiscal architecture. Efficient governance creates the conditions for trust and accountability, while taxation provides the resources needed to sustain and scale those reforms. The equilibrium lies in ensuring that each reinforces, rather than undermines, the other.


However, we must confront a difficult but necessary truth: we cannot blame Filipinos for doubting taxation. Public skepticism is not born from ignorance but from experience. When controversies involving the misuse or questionable allocation of public funds arise, they erode confidence not only in specific institutions but in the entire fiscal system. The ordinary Filipino begins to ask a question that strikes at the core of governance: why should I faithfully pay my taxes if the system itself cannot guarantee that these contributions are protected and used properly?


This question is not an act of resistance. It is a manifestation of broken trust. And trust, once fractured, cannot be restored by policy declarations alone. It must be rebuilt through visible reform, consistent accountability, and institutional discipline. This is why prioritization becomes essential. While equilibrium remains the long-term objective, the immediate task is to fix the system—decisively and credibly—so that governance can once again earn the confidence of the people.


Yet as we probe deeper into what it truly means to “fix the system,” we are inevitably drawn to a more fundamental inquiry. What exactly constitutes the system we seek to reform? Governance inefficiencies, fiscal leakages, and administrative weaknesses are not isolated occurrences. They are shaped by the constitutional and structural design of government itself. The Constitution defines how power is distributed, how authority is exercised, and how accountability is enforced. In this sense, persistent governance challenges may not only be operational failures but also reflections of structural limitations.


This realization brings constitutional reform into the center of the discussion. The current framework, while grounded in democratic principles, may also produce unintended consequences such as over-centralization, fragmented accountability, and uneven development across regions. These structural characteristics can create environments where inefficiencies persist and corruption finds space to operate. Thus, meaningful reform may require not only improving systems within the existing structure but also re-examining the structure itself.


One pathway that continues to gain attention is the concept of evolving federalism. The rationale is straightforward: by redistributing power and resources to regions, governance can become more responsive, localized, and development-oriented. Provinces and regions, when empowered, can harness their own economic strengths, tailor policies to their unique contexts, and become active drivers of national growth. In theory, this shift can correct long-standing imbalances and bring government closer to the people it serves.


However, federalism is not a cure-all. Without strong institutions, genuine local accountability, and effective safeguards against elite capture, decentralization risks merely replicating the same patterns of corruption at multiple levels of government. It may even deepen inequalities if local political dynasties and entrenched interests dominate newly empowered regional structures. The success of any constitutional reform, therefore, depends not only on the elegance of its structural design but more critically on the integrity, competence, and discipline of those who operate within it. A well-crafted constitution can provide the framework, but it is the human element—leadership, ethics, and institutional culture—that ultimately determines outcomes.


Thus, the transition to any new system—federal or otherwise—must be accompanied by robust institutional reforms that go beyond formal structural changes. This includes strengthening anti-corruption bodies, enhancing the independence and capacity of audit institutions, professionalizing the civil service, and embedding digital governance systems that minimize discretion and opportunities for abuse. Capacity-building at the local level becomes indispensable, ensuring that provinces and regions are not only granted authority but are also equipped with the technical, administrative, and fiscal competence to exercise it effectively.


Equally important is the cultivation of a culture of accountability that permeates all levels of governance. Accountability must not be reactive or occasional, but embedded in everyday processes. Transparency initiatives, open data systems, citizen participation, and community-based monitoring must be institutionalized so that power remains constantly subject to scrutiny. In this context, decentralization must be matched by decentralized accountability—where citizens are empowered not only as beneficiaries of governance but as active participants in overseeing it.


Fiscal arrangements within a reformed system must also be carefully designed. Revenue-sharing mechanisms, taxation powers, and intergovernmental transfers must balance autonomy with equity. Regions must be encouraged to innovate and generate their own resources while ensuring that less-developed areas are supported and not left behind. Without this balance, structural reform risks widening disparities rather than addressing them.


What emerges from this analysis is a layered approach to reform. At one level, administrative systems must be strengthened to eliminate inefficiencies. At another, governance must rebuild trust through transparency and accountability. At the deepest level, constitutional structures may need to evolve to better align with national development goals. These layers are not independent—they are interconnected and mutually reinforcing.



Taxation, within this framework, becomes a reflection of trust. When governance is effective, transparent, and accountable, taxation gains legitimacy and acceptance. Citizens comply not because they are compelled, but because they believe in the system. In contrast, when governance is weak, even well-designed tax policies face resistance. The issue, therefore, is not merely how much tax is collected, but whether the system collecting it is trusted.


In conclusion, sustainable development is achieved not by choosing between reform and taxation, but by harmonizing them within a system that is both effective and credible. Fixing the system must come with urgency, strengthening governance must come with consistency, and any structural transformation must come with caution and depth. Federalism or any constitutional reform may offer pathways forward, but they must be grounded in strong institutions and guided by integrity.


Because in the end, the true foundation of governance is not structure alone, but trust—and trust is built not by promises, but by performance.

#DJOT

________________

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academicpublic intellectual, and advocate for civic education and public safety, whose work spans local academies and international security circles. With a career rooted in teaching, research, policy, and public engagement, he bridges theory and practice by making meaningful contributions to academic discourse, civic education, and public policy. Dr. Teope is widely respected for his critical scholarship in education, managementeconomicsdoctrine development, and public safety; his grassroots involvement in government and non-government organizations; his influential media presence promoting democratic values and civic consciousness; and his ethical leadership grounded in Filipino nationalism and public service. As a true public intellectual, he exemplifies how research, advocacy, governance, and education can work together in pursuit of the nation’s moral and civic mission.

Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

Blog Archive

Search This Blog