Government agencies in the Philippines have begun recording certain public documents on a blockchain ledger, a step officials say is meant to make records harder to change and easier for citizens to check.
The system anchors cryptographic hashes on the Polygon network so files can be proven unchanged later. Local civic groups and some universities have been named as independent validators who can attest to entries, and their attestations are also recorded.
Reports have disclosed that the Philippines Department of Budget and Management has already been using blockchain notarization for budget paperwork.
Special Allotment Release Orders (SAROs) and Notices of Cash Allocation (NCAs) can be hashed and uploaded so anyone can check whether a document was altered after publication.
Officials describe this as a way to make parts of the budget trackable in public view while keeping sensitive details protected.
Based on reports, lawmakers and city officials pointed to those street protests as a key reason to speed up transparency measures.
At the city level, Baguio has rolled out a local system branded GoodGovChain to log municipal financial statements, procurement records, and infrastructure reports.
The launch, according to city leaders, is aimed at making official documents available and nearly impossible to tamper with after publication.
Meanwhile, a Senate filing — Senate Bill No. 1330 — was lodged to create a National Budget Blockchain System, according to press releases.
The proposal would let Philippines citizens trace national spending more easily. Lawmakers backing the measure argue that blockchain logs could give the public a clearer view of where funds move, though opponents warn about cost and complexity.
Featured image from Corporate Finance Institute, chart from TradingView