Panama estimates over $5 billion in corruption losses over two decades

An investigation reveals that Panama has lost over $5.104 billion in public funds due to 90 emblematic corruption cases over the past 21 years. This amount equals about 6% of the 2024 GDP and exceeds key budgets like education and health. Corruption has worsened social exclusion, contributing to tragedies such as the deaths of indigenous children in Ngäbe Buglé rivers.

A review of 90 corruption cases in Panama, from 2004 to 2024, estimates $5.104 billion in economic damage to the state. The report, drawn from judicial proceedings and official audits, highlights two major cases: Odebrecht's cost overruns exceeding $2 billion between 2006 and 2019, and $1.2 billion in damages from the Panama Ports Company concession since 1997. The remaining 88 cases add nearly $1.5 billion, including social programs turned into patronage tools and poorly executed infrastructure.

The 2009-2014 period saw 57 representative cases, involving overpricing in projects and money laundering via shell companies. From 2014-2019, numerous files were opened, but convictions remained rare due to institutional constraints. The COVID-19 pandemic in 2019-2024 enabled abuses in emergency contracting.

This lost amount surpasses the 2025 annual education budget ($3.651 billion) or health ($2.374 billion), and exceeds the Panama Canal's 2024 contributions ($2.4708 billion). Sociologist Gilberto Toro notes that impunity targets the poor more, fueling public intolerance toward abuses.

Experts like Alma Montenegro de Fletcher stress ethical lapses: “We don't lack laws; we lack commitment from those who must enforce them.” Carlos Barsallo warns of equal institutional harm: “People believe in nothing and no one.” A Fudespa study links this corruption to indigenous exclusion, where 55-70 children have died crossing rivers to school—a issue that $42-63 million could address with safe bridges.

Of the 90 cases, only a dozen led to convictions, exposing judicial weaknesses like backlogs and resource shortages.

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Philippine Vice Governor Roselyn Espina-Paras and family facing media scrutiny outside Ombudsman office amid plunder complaint over DPWH project corruption in Biliran.
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Espina family in Biliran faces plunder complaint over DPWH projects

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Lord Allan Merced-Garcia filed a plunder complaint with the Ombudsman on October 30, 2025, against the Espina family of Biliran over alleged theft in Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) projects. Roving Premier, owned by Vice Governor Roselyn Espina-Paras and her husband, secured over P1 billion in contracts since 2020. This ties into the broader flood control corruption scandal exposed by President Marcos Jr. in July 2025.

In 2025, mass protests erupted nationwide against a sprawling corruption scandal involving flood control and infrastructure funds. Dozens of political and business figures, including high-level legislators, faced criminal charges. The scandal has raised doubts about governance and the country's economic trajectory.

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Amid the investigation into the DPWH flood control projects scandal, concerns arise over potential cycles of corruption where 'big fish' evade accountability. An opinion piece warns that many past scandals ended without jailing high officials. Monitoring the entire process is crucial to ensure justice.

In her first public comments after resigning from the Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI), Rossana Fajardo said undoing entrenched corruption in government would require 'several lifetimes' by removing everyone involved. She shared these observations from her brief tenure investigating flood control scandals at the Philippine Business for Social Progress annual meeting.

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President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. signed the P6.793-trillion national budget for 2026 on January 5, allocating a record P1.015 trillion to the Department of Education and P530.9 billion to the DPWH. He vetoed P92.5 billion in unprogrammed appropriations, leaving P150.9 billion, while vowing prudent spending to curb corruption. The budget bars political involvement in aid distribution, though critics question the remaining funds.

The South African Police Service (SAPS) is grappling with 48,569 civil claims for unlawful arrests and wrongful detentions, amounting to a potential R56.7 billion liability. This crisis stems from systemic issues like poor training and impunity, eroding public trust in law enforcement. Recent payouts reached R620 million in the 2024/25 financial year alone.

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The trial over alleged corruption in Neiva's 2020 School Feeding Program (PAE) contracting moves forward with a new judicial timeline, led by Judge Olga María Erazo. Former mayor Gorky Muñoz Calderón, now a Senate candidate, faces charges alongside ex-officials and contractors. The preparatory hearing aims to wrap up evidence discovery to start the oral trial in March.

 

 

 

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