Proposed by FSGO for Consideration by the Aquino Administration
Foundations of Good Governance: Democracy and National Unity
4. Strengthening our democracy and realizing our national unity will remain works in progress requiring the effort of generations. Yet even with outstanding deficits in our democracy and unity, we can still take enormous strides and make considerable progress in the next six years if we all work together towards making our government free of corruption and a practitioner of good governance. This progress through good governance is the purpose of this agenda for 2010-2016.
Three Catalytic Acts to Mobilize the Nation for Good Governance
6. In such a social contract, we all have to step forward and be counted. We all have to participate. We have to get involved. And our newly elected president should catalyze our people's mobilization and involvement. This is thus the first catalytic act of good governance of a President: for him to call all citizens and join him in a national movement for responsible citizenship. He should not only call for it; he should head it and lead it. Through citizens' volunteer groups, starting with those most actively involved in securing the integrity of our elections and in promoting the different political campaigns, we should all unite and band together for our "Inang Bayan." This citizens' movement should inculcate the proper values of responsible citizenship, stressing both duties and rights, and moving all Filipinos to do the "12 little things that every Filipino can do each day for our country" (Ref. Alex Lacson). The "12 little things" should start in the first year with obeying traffic rules and with respecting and supporting our uniformed services, both the police and our armed forces. The next year the focus shall shift to the next two "things" such that in 6 years we shall have gotten all "12 little things" deeply embedded in our way of life as Filipinos. Let us not forget that a governance culture starts with compliance with the law and with the rules, and therefore with due enforcement of the law, starting with all traffic laws in 2010.
7. The second catalytic act of a good governance President is to call upon all national government agencies---extending to all GOCCs and GFIs---and all LGUs to formulate and execute a good governance program. Under such a program, they shall:
a) Set forth their vision of what they should become by 2016 as they contribute to the realization of our common national aspiration for the government of the Philippines to be acknowledged for good governance by the Filipino people and the international community.
b) Identify their own strategic priorities, highlighted after due consideration of the training and equipment they provide for their people, the level of effectiveness of their internal processes, the services they must render to their respective constituencies, and the financial resources they can generate.
c) Specify the key initiatives they need to undertake as they pursue their strategic priorities as well as the measures of performance they shall be using to monitor progress, and the targets they must meet by 2016 and all the preceding years leading up to 2016.
d) Report every semester, and therefore every year, through official channels and to the general public, on their actual performance relative to the targets they had set, and using the measures of progress they had adopted.
e) Evaluate the performance and contribution of each office unit and of each individual in those office units to the achievement of the over-all targets on the part of the national government agency, GOCC, GFI, or LGU to which they belong. A culture of transparency and accountability needs to be nurtured, promoted, and observed in all government offices through a system that rewards above-target performance and duly punishes under-performance.
8. The third catalytic act of a good governance President is to call for effective public-private sector partnership through the formalization and institutionalization of a multi-sector governance coalition in various spheres of our national life, involving national government agencies, GOCCs, GFIs, and LGUs as well as private sector organizations. Through such a partnership, public officials and ordinary citizens through their respective sectoral groups and associations work together such that:
a) All sectoral groups commit to make their respective positive contributions towards the pursuit of the strategic priorities of the government agency concerned or the LGU in their respective communities;
b) The multi-sector governance coalition effectively ensures transparency, integrity and compliance with the law in all government transactions, particularly in the procurement area.
c) Ordinary citizens through their respective associations assist in raising the standards of efficiency and effectiveness in the delivery of public services, and in properly evaluating the performance of the government agency or LGU concerned.
Good Governance Mobilization: Strengthening of Grassroots Institutions
a) Our families need to become more united and strong.
b) Our schools at all levels need their standards upgraded and put at par with global standards.
c) Our SMEs need to be multiplied, made viable and competitive.
d) Our social enterprises need to become more effective and organized in pursuing their social responsibility programs.
e) Our barangays need more support for them to become more potent instruments for social cohesion, economic development, ecological protection and improvement, and in particular the achievement of the millennium development goals. Since the barangays and the LGUs of which they are component parts are closest to the needs of our people, they should become the principal conduits of our welfare programs and other initiatives as well as resources aimed at countrywide development.
a) All our professions and key sectors, which should require continuing education and training for professional advancement and excellence, in full adherence with global best practices.
b) All our public governance units, from national government agencies down to the last LGU, whose internal processes for delivering public services should be in line with international certification standards.
c) All our business and government corporations, which need to adhere to global standards of corporate governance, with due consideration for our local culture, which nonetheless should not dilute the essential requirements of a governance system that delivers breakthrough performance.
National Government Policies for Good Governance
a) Expand and modernize our physical infrastructure, facilitating connectivity between our communities and our hubs of commercial and economic enterprises with the rest of the world.
b) Reforest our denuded mountains and hills, and enable our seas, rivers and lakes to thrive with marine life.
c) Open all major sectors and industries of our economy to easy access, entry, and free competition under a simple regulatory framework that ensures market discipline and compliance with our laws.
d) Raise our export ratio, our savings and investment rate, our tax effort, our spending on infrastructure and education, and thereby lift the average real growth of our economy to 8% per year towards the end of this six-year period.











