Gov’t releases P600M for anti-corruption IT system

Rappler.com

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Called the GIFMIS, the online application will integrate the processes performed by the budget department, COA, and the Bureau of Treasury

MANILA, Philippines – The budget department said on Thursday, March 20, it released P600 million for the administration’s anti-corruption information technology (IT) system.

The Government Integrated Financial Management Information System (GIFMIS), is an online application that integrates all public financial management processes of the government. 

The Web application will be integrating processes – such as accounting, cash management, reporting and auditing – performed by the 3 major oversight agencies of the government: the Department of Budget and Management, the Commission on Audit, and the Department of Finance-Bureau of Treasury (DOF-BTr).

“Because it’s Web-based and updated in real time, all data in the system are easily tracked to ensure the integrity of our public financial management processes,” Budget Secretary Florencio Abad said. 

The P600-million release will help cover the following:

ParticularsTotal
Study GIFMIS system requirements and installation P346,490,000
Application Software Licenses for transaction users 314,560,000
Application Software Licenses for read-only users (auditors) 31,930,000
System design, development/configuration & customization 60,280,000
Software customization/development for application software 60,280,000
Installation of IT Infrastructure 118,250,000
IT infrastructure with installation and configuration cost 118,250,000
Operational acceptance of GIFMIS 74,980,000
Training and Capacity Building during implementation phase 9,460,000
Change Management & Communication Services 65,520,000
TOTAL P600,000,000

 

The release was charged against E-government fund, a line item in the General Appropriations Act that supports major information and communication technology projects of the government. 

“We’re getting GIFMIS off the ground, exactly as the President instructed. The whole system, once in place, will embed financial transparency in the day-to-day operation of government,” DBM Undersecretary and Chief Information Officer Richard Moya added. 

Moya added that GIFMIS serves as a major instrument for the government’s good governance initiatives. 

Recently, the government also launched the Open Data website to address concerns on public governance and accountability. (Read: Will Open Data initiatives make government offices in the country more transparent?)

“Outdated systems and processes are susceptible to abuse, leading to inefficiency, wastage and opportunities for the unscrupulous to steal,” President Benigno Aquino III said during the good governance summit held January 2014.  Rappler.com 

Background image from Shutterstock

 

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!