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MANILA, Philippines – The Commission on Audit (COA) questioned the release of P926 million for the flagship Ayuda sa Kapos ang Kita Program (AKAP), flagging “abuse” of the system.
State auditors found thousands of beneficiaries getting payments multiple times or getting payouts even if they were not eligible.
Specifically, COA flagged the following:
COA released the results of their audit of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) program in its 2024 audit, made public on Thursday, December 18.
AKAP is a program that was launched under the 19th Congress by then-House speaker Martin Romualdez, the President’s cousin. It is meant to target below minimum wage earners and other near-poor Filipinos, or groups who are not usually eligible for other aid programs, like the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps), Assistance to Individuals in Crisis Situations (AICS), and Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvantaged/Displaced Workers (TUPAD).
Payouts include rice assistance, medicine and laboratory cost assistance, and food assistance, which are given every three months. Eligible individuals can also get funeral assistance, and hospital bills assistance, among others.
COA recommended that the DSWD “create a centralized national beneficiary verification platform” that would include real-time syncing, flagging of suspect entries, enable real-time eligibility checks, among others, to “verify the payment status of a beneficiary before releasing assistance to prevent duplicate or erroneous disbursements.”
COA found that some AKAP recipients were also getting payouts from other programs.
“Audit of the disbursements of AKAP benefits revealed instances of beneficiaries receiving the same financial assistance within the day from different SDOs (special disbursing officers), due to simultaneous payouts and without the list of validated beneficiaries,” said state auditors in the report.
COA specifically flagged the following:
All in all, COA noted that P108.3 million in financial aid “was compromised due to various lapses including duplication of aid, erroneous disbursements, and misidentification of eligible beneficiaries.”
Students — who are not supposed to be recipients of AKAP — were also able to receive payouts, state auditors found.
“The assistance was granted directly to students instead of their parents or guardians, contrary to the program’s intent and guidelines. In cases where parents were identified as beneficiaries, there was no supporting documentation to establish that they were low-income earners or minimum wage workers,” COA said.
They flagged the following:
COA also flagged the DSWD’s shortcomings in screening procedures, leading to over 100,000 individuals getting cash under AKAP despite being unable to present valid IDs or reliable employment records.
“Based on the documented deficiencies, the AKAP financial assistance program by the DSWD exhibited significant lapses in eligibility assessment, documentation, and internal controls. Across various FOs (field offices), a total of P768,732,995.92 in assistance was disbursed despite issues such as incomplete and unverified supporting documents,” said COA.
The DSWD, through its Program Head for Operation of AKAP, told COA they would take steps to improve their systems for verification, in coordination with agencies like the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, the Department of Agriculture, or with local transport organizations.
They raised red flags on the following:
– Rappler.com


