We can draw encouragement and caution from nations that have used technology as a governance lever. When implemented smartly, it can shift the balance of power enough to curb corruption. But success always depends on more than code—it rests on people, politics, and institutions. Take Estonia, for example. After regaining independence, it transformed into a “digital society.” Citizens can conduct almost all government business online: filing taxes, registering businesses, accessing health records, and voting. This ecosystem rests on strong identity systems, the secure X-Road data exchange architecture, and legal frameworks that tie the digital and legal worlds together. Because so many functions are now visible and traceable, the space for under-the-table deals shrinks, and trust rises as citizens experience instant, auditable feedback loops. Georgia’s land registry project offers another vivid lesson. The country anchored property transfers to a blockchain system, making historical ownership chains nearly impossible to tamper with. As a result, land disputes declined in pilot areas, and confidence in property rights rose. The publicly verifiable ledger forced intermediaries—local officials and registry clerks—to operate more transparently because their changes leave audit traces that anyone can follow. Ukraine took a more lightweight approach with “Prozorro,” a national e-procurement system. While not a full blockchain architecture, it shares the same core transparency goals: every tender, bid, and contract is published openly. This allows citizens, companies, and watchdogs to monitor procurement across all government levels. This oversight reportedly cut kickbacks and favoritism in many public projects. (Prozorro has since become a reference in reform literature.) In Dubai, real estate transactions and land contracts have also moved toward digital registries underpinned by blockchain-like proofs. This reduces the chances for backroom title alterations. In practice, buyers, banks, and utilities can instantly verify that a title hasn\'t been secretly changed, building transparency into the transaction itself. These examples demonstrate that technology can rewire incentives. If every move is logged and every change traceable, the “room for discretion” for corrupt actors shrinks. But I must underscore that none of these countries eliminated corruption entirely. They simply made it harder to hide, raised the cost of misbehavior, and provided citizens with better tools to spot anomalies. Still, these experiments also teach us where tech alone fails. In some projects, officials found ways to collude, either through means outside the system or by controlling who gained access to the system itself. The digital divide mattered profoundly: where users lacked access or understanding, new systems merely shifted the advantage to tech coders and insiders. In Ukraine, parts of the procurement system still rely on human judgment—something that neither blockchain nor publication can fully police. (One study notes that blockchain helps but doesn\'t always outperform robust e-procurement systems in all contexts.) Another frequent obstacle is that law and institutions lag. In many cases, data privacy, dispute resolution, appeals, identity verification, and oversight agencies must all catch up. Technology without a legal backbone is brittle. Since some register entries inevitably require corrections or reversals, immutable chains must be designed with “rectification records,” not deletions. Without this flexibility, the system risks building inflexibility and new injustices. What gives me cautious optimism is seeing how some governments layered incremental digital reforms rather than pursuing blind, grand tech gambits. They started small: digital payments, open tenders, and public portals for citizens to track budget flows. They then added audit trails, cryptographic proofs, and eventually, ledger anchoring. This layering made transparency a part of the institutional DNA. In many countries, corruption starts with information asymmetry. Officials know more than citizens, control paperwork, delay disclosure, or manipulate sequencing. When you insert technical systems that narrow this asymmetry, you make power more symmetric. That fundamental shift changes how people behave. So yes: a poor or developing country like the Philippines can succeed. But success won\'t come by simply installing blockchain. It requires fundamental investment in identity, connectivity, laws, training, and citizen engagement. It must build systems that people trust, reward reformers, and hold bad actors accountable. Technology is a tool, not a panacea. When paired with political will and structural checks, it can deliver real change. The author is the Founder and CEO of Hungry Workhorse, a digital, culture, and customer experience transformation consulting firm. He is a Fellow at the US-based Institute for Digital Transformation. He teaches strategic management and digital transformation in the MBA Program of De La Salle University. The author may be emailed at rey.lugtu@hungryworkhorse.com