The 1987 Philippine Constitution was drafted after the 1986 People Power Revolution to establish democratic
governance, political accountability, and social justice. This review evaluates how the Constitution’s institutional
design and economic policy provisions affect political and economic outcomes amid ongoing governance
challenges. Using an integrative qualitative literature review, this study synthesizes empirical, theoretical, and
policy literature from diverse academic and institutional sources. Systematic search and thematic analysis
examine the relationship between constitutional formal rules and informal political dynamics shaping
governance and economic reforms. The Constitution enshrines checks and balances, decentralization, limits on
foreign ownership, and anti-dynasty provisions. Despite these, elite dominance and patronage politics weaken
their effectiveness. Economic policies intended to protect national sovereignty have created policy inflexibilities,
restricting foreign investment and economic flexibility. Decentralization outcomes vary due to local elite
capture. Current reform debates focus on economic liberalization and federalism but face resistance from
entrenched political interests. The 1987 Constitution offers a robust democratic and economic framework, but
entrenched political elites hinder full implementation of its goals. Successful reform efforts must address both
institutional provisions and underlying political practices to improve accountability, institutional capacity, and
inclusive development.
Keywords: constitutional political economy, institutional design, economic policy outcomes, literature review
1. Journal Description 2. Select Journal a. Declaration of Originality b. Select the Journal c. Paper Formatting d. Initial Manuscript Submission e. Peer Review Process f. Manuscript Revision g. Editing Services h. Final Manuscript Submission i. Acknowledgement to Publish j. Copyright Matters k. Inhouse Publication