The Flood, the Theater, and the Choice: Reclaiming Decision-Making in Philippine Governance
From “already being done” to doing what actually matters
By Karl Garcia
Executive Summary
The Philippines is not short of ideas; it is drowning in them. Every department, agency, and legislator generates proposals, programs, and bills at unprecedented volumes. On the surface, this activity signals progress—but in reality, it produces noise, redundancy, and stagnation.
This white paper argues that the country’s governance challenge is not the lack of plans, but the absence of disciplined decision-making. It proposes the creation of human triage councils, supported by AI tools, to evaluate, prioritize, and terminate initiatives, ensuring that resources are directed toward programs that truly deliver impact.
Key recommendations include:
- Institutionalizing triage councils across agencies and at the national level.
- Integrating AI as a decision-support tool, not a generator of output.
- Aligning incentives with measurable outcomes, not mere activity.
- Implementing a phased roadmap with pilot programs, national coordination, AI integration, and continuous monitoring.
Case studies from Singapore, Estonia, and Philippine disaster management illustrate the benefits of structured prioritization and the costs of fragmentation.
The future of Philippine governance will depend not on how much it can do, but on its ability to choose wisely, act decisively, and discard the rest.
I. The Flooding Problem: When More Becomes Less
The Philippines faces abundance without discipline. Hundreds of bills are filed, programs coexist without coordination, and proposals accumulate in bureaucratic silos.
Impact:
- Redundancy across agencies
- Resource misallocation
- Fragmented execution
II. The Theater of Busyness
The system has become highly effective at appearing productive:
- Filed bills ≠ law
- Law ≠ implementation
- Implementation ≠ impact
Government functions as a performance stage, rewarding visible outputs over meaningful outcomes.
III. “Already Being Done”: The Language of Stagnation
The phrase “already being done” signals participation in bureaucracy, not problem-solving. Existence of programs is mistaken for effectiveness. This shields inefficiencies from scrutiny and perpetuates fragmentation.
IV. The Missing Discipline: Why Nothing Gets Killed
The core flaw: we know how to add but not how to subtract. Proposals enter, programs accumulate, and initiatives persist without systematic evaluation.
Result:
- “Zombie programs” drain resources
- National-scale decision fatigue
V. The Politics of Volume vs. the Politics of Impact
Electoral systems and incentives reward volume over impact. Hundreds of bills may produce little change; two well-crafted laws can transform sectors.
Key Question: Do we value how much is done—or what actually works?
VI. Case Studies: Lessons from Success and Failure
| Case | Approach | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Singapore | Centralized triage councils, clear KPIs, program termination, cross-agency coordination | High alignment, low duplication |
| Estonia | AI-assisted e-government for de-duplication and ranking | Efficiency gains; human oversight remains critical |
| Philippine Disaster Response | Fragmented agencies, overlapping programs | Inefficiency, wasted resources, delayed action |
| Philippine Legislative Bills | Thousands filed, few enacted | Demonstrates urgent need for prioritization and triage |
VII. Implementation Roadmap
Phase 1 (0–12 months): Pilot Human Triage Councils
- Deploy in high-volume agencies only
- Council of senior officials + AI specialist
- Standardized evaluation rubrics
Phase 2 (12–24 months): National Triage Council
- Coordinate across agencies
- Consolidate proposals
- Standardize inter-agency protocols
Phase 3 (18–36 months): Full AI Integration
- Detect duplication, rank priorities
- Continuous monitoring dashboards
- Human oversight remains essential
Phase 4 (24–48 months): Incentive Realignment
- Reward outcomes over outputs
- Transparency and public reporting
Phase 5 (36+ months): Continuous Improvement
- Refine protocols, expand to local levels
- Annual audits and adaptive learning
VIII. Risks, Challenges, and Mitigation Strategies
| Risk Category | Challenge | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Political | Resistance, interference | Legal mandate, stakeholder engagement, incentive alignment |
| Technological | Overreliance on AI, poor data, cybersecurity | Human oversight, standardized data, robust security |
| Cultural | “Already being done” mindset, risk aversion | Training, workshops, and transparency |
| Operational | Funding, capacity limitations | Phased implementation, training, and partnerships |
Key Insight: The risks of inaction outweigh the challenges of implementation.
IX. Conclusion and Call to Action
The Philippines cannot continue treating busyness as progress. True governance requires:
- Courage to choose: Prioritize initiatives that deliver measurable impact.
- Institutionalized triage: Human councils empowered to evaluate, merge, and terminate programs.
- AI as discipline: Support, not replace, human decision-making.
- Aligned incentives: Reward results, not activity.
In a system defined by abundance, progress is about choosing wisely, executing decisively, and discarding the rest.
The future of Philippine governance will be measured not by how many proposals it generates, but by its ability to decide, act, and deliver results that truly matter.
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As a former planning master for our corporation I can testify professionally that Philippine national government, and most LGUs, have zero ideas about how to make planning work. That goes for legislative planning as well. Every change of administration, NEDA publishes an elaborate, slick, infinitely detailed, and mostly useless planning document. I laughed the first time I scanned through the mighty tome, my mind boggled by the comprehensive irrelevance, only to find at the end President Aquino’s two page itemization of his priorities. He agreed. Too awesome to digest.
The Japanese took American MBO (management by objectives), refined it, and created the excellence that drove their autos (and other products) to the top of the world. Their plan for our bank, a major corporation, was two large-sized sheets of paper. Fitting into it were the two-page plans of subordinate units, all hammered into alignment with the top two pages. Genius in process.
Thanks Joe. Irineo and Joey have been at the topic for days and if Joey’s forte is contribution myself and Irineo might translate those contributions to articles.
Thanks Joe, I actually had articles lined up till November and been doing some trimming.
If you plan to write again just jump in.
Gian told me to spread it and let it breathe. So my daily became MWF
That’s a good schedule. Thanks.
The pleasure is mine.
I think spreading out articles a bit when there’s an active discussion going on might help Karl. It gets difficult to have substantial discussions when there are daily article drops. I really appreciate your help putting my ramblings into article form!
Thank you. I’m enjoying the fruits of your labors, LOL.
LOL x 10. Again the pleasure is mine but with aspiration of to be ours including readers.
Just created three possible graphics for my article that will present Joey’s plan on April 26th:
1st:
2nd:
3rd:
As there is no poll I am just crowdsourcing which of the three pictures are preferred.
I can only process three files per 24 hours with my free ChatGPT (Claude isn’t free) so the next three files will come tomorrow, and three more on Thursday.
Once I have all three summarized I can make my own “big picture” and a first article draft by this weekend, questions for Joey.
Click to access 1.-asean6_automotive_investment_report_2021_2025.pdf
Click to access 2.-ph_automotive_industrial_policy_analysis.pdf
Click to access 3.-ph_conglomerates_automotive_sector.pdf
The weekend afterwards (18th-19th April) will be to sift through the details and double-check the first draft.
AFAIK Claude free accounts do support file uploads (images, DOC/DOCX, XLS/XLSX, CSV, PDF, HTML, etc.). The limits are 30MB and 100 pages.
Claude’s image generation isn’t as strong as ChatGPT’s DALL-E image model as Claude focuses more on technical work, but I don’t find that to be a limitation for my purposes.
Looking forward to your questions. I’ll be happy to answer any questions you may have. Though I haven’t taken on an automotive industry gig in a while I do have a lot of experience there. Interestingly before I took on my latest (AI) gig, Hyundai was attempting to recruit me for a telematics project (their North American HQ is in the Great Los Angeles Metropolitan Area).
OK, tried Claude, and the results are impressive:
Click to access 4.-ph_automotive_5yr_10yr_blueprint.pdf
Click to access 5.-neda_memo_2026_auto_001.pdf
Click to access 6.-ph_auto_legislation_impact_analysis.pdf
Click to access 7.-paselp_draft_bills.pdf
Click to access 8.-ph_auto_public_communications.pdf
Used up my Claude tokens today quickly, but that is OK, learning where I can use what tools best is a great thing.
Claude has a more sober tone and the accuracy is also impressive.
That’s cool. I didn’t know Claude could recognize that the GDP screenshot was an extract from an uploaded file. Claude even recognized which file it was from. Impressive.
Since you’re using the free version of Claude (which is limited to the Sonnet and Haiku models) something you can do is to pre-write the prompts you intend to submit. Pre-writing prompts can help you organize thoughts so that the outputs will flow accordingly. You can also edit prior prompts to either reset the conversion from that point or to re-run the prompt, but that uses up new tokens up to your token limit. Pre-writing prompts also allows you to quickly submit new prompts when your tokens free up. It’s hard to use up tokens though unless you’re having Claude crunch heavy analysis. Also remember that Claude has a memory function (you may need to turn it on in the settings). The memory remembers conversations across multiple discussions unless you explicitly tell it not to do so in that conversation. Alternatively you can also tell Claude to fetch the context/memory from a prior discussion and add it to the new conversation. Doing so would conserve tokens.
I pick the first.
This is what ChatGPT told me after a few iterations re German Kanzleramt and UK/US equivalents – and what lessons the Philippines can learn from the three:
One who has been to/observed UK politics can probably identify problems with their system fairly quickly. There is a joke that the (UK) Conservatives and (UK) Labour are one and the same, and in many ways the parties are not far from each other despite being center-right and center-left respectively. The UK system is anemic in addressing the changes that came after the sun set on the Empire. The compensation offers I received from UK firms were laughable, which is why I never took on a job there. I have British friends (mostly Midlanders and Northumbrians) who despite graduating as engineers until now work as cashiers and stockboys at the Tesco (grocery chain)…
I’m not familiar with the German system enough to comment much on the system there. German friends still complain about the legacy of Willy Brandt, Helmut Schmidt, and more recently Gerhard Schröder.
The US system does have high resilience in the federal bureaucracy within the departments and agencies but can be stymied by political leadership at the top (secretaries and directors). Still there is usually enough institutional momentum that bad political direction becomes but a speed bump in the long run. Project 2025 which is the template of Trump 2.0 is the first major existential threat to the professional federal bureaucratic workforce in the entire existence of the professionalized federal bureaucracy. Project 2025 does get it correct that the institutional momentum cannot be substantially blunted as long as the bureaucracy exists, so they aim to demoralize and force the bureaucracy to quit. Some did but thankfully there are many patriots who are holding on and throwing sand in the gears where they can. Normally the check against this insanity would be in Congress but it seems the whole purpose of Republican Congress now is to hide the Epstein Files. The other major plus points for the US system is the federal system is decentralized and thus a state can chart its own policies (not withstanding matters of national security), and a state like my state of California can become the 4th most powerful economy in the world through pluralistic multiculturalism if a state wanted to.