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Corrupt
political elites and unscrupulous investors kill sustainable growth
in its tracks
Transparency International
Berlin,
August 28, 2002
To download
the full report
visit the Transparency International website at:
http://www.transparency.org/pressreleases_archive/2002/2002.08.28.cpi.en.html
The TI Corruption
Perceptions Index 2002 ranks 102 countries, the highest number ever.
Seven out of ten countries ranked score less than 5 out of a clean
score of 10
"Political
elites and their cronies continue to take kickbacks at every opportunity.
Hand in glove with corrupt business people, they are trapping whole
nations in poverty and hampering sustainable development. Corruption
is perceived to be dangerously high in poor parts of the world,
but also in many countries whose firms invest in developing nations,"
said Peter Eigen, Chairman of Transparency International, speaking
today on the launch of the Corruption Perceptions Index 2002 (CPI).
"Politicians
increasingly pay lip-service to the fight against corruption but
they fail to act on the clear message of TI’s CPI: that they must
clamp down on corruption to break the vicious circle of poverty
and graft. Seven out of ten countries score less than 5 out of a
clean score of 10 in the CPI 2002, which reflects perceived levels
of corruption among politicians and public officials."
"Corrupt
political elites in the developing world, working hand-in-hand with
greedy business people and unscrupulous investors, are putting private
gain before the welfare of citizens and the economic development
of their countries," said Peter Eigen. "From illegal logging
to blood diamonds, we are seeing the plundering of the earth and
its people in an unsustainable way."
The new index,
published today by Transparency International (TI), the world’s
leading non-governmental organisation fighting corruption, ranks
102 countries. Seventy countries – including many of the world’s
most poverty-stricken – score less than 5 out of a clean score of
10. Corruption is perceived to be rampant in Indonesia, Kenya, Angola,
Madagascar, Paraguay, Nigeria and Bangladesh, countries with a score
of less than 2. Countries with a score of higher than 9, with very
low levels of perceived corruption, are predominantly rich countries,
namely Finland, Denmark, New Zealand, Iceland, Singapore and Sweden.
The CPI is a
poll of polls, reflecting the perceptions of business people and
country analysts, both resident and non-resident. First launched
in 1995, this year’s CPI draws on 15 surveys from nine independent
institutions. A rolling survey of polls taken between 2000 and 2002,
the CPI includes only those countries that feature in at least three
surveys. "It is important to emphasise that the CPI, even with
102 countries, is only a snapshot and covers barely half the more
than 200 sovereign nations in the world," said Peter Eigen.
"There is not sufficient data on other countries, many of which
are likely to be very corrupt."
The CPI 2002
complements TI’s Bribe Payers Index, which addresses the propensity
of companies from top exporting countries to bribe in emerging markets.
The BPI 2002, published on 14 May 2002, revealed high levels of
bribery by firms from Russia, China, Taiwan and South Korea, closely
followed by Italy, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Japan, USA and France –
although many of these countries signed the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention,
which outlaws bribery of foreign public officials.
Before leaving
for the United Nations Johannesburg Summit on Sustainable Development,
Eigen stressed that "the summit in Johannesburg must lead to
action. Corruption impedes sustainable development and robs the
children of today of the resources they will need to survive tomorrow.
When the leaders sign the Johannesburg Declaration, they must make
pledges they can keep, not raise false hopes."
"The New
Partnership for Africa’s Development has set out some bold aims,
which I applaud. Good governance and transparency are essential
to sustainable development," he continued. "Just as international
institutions and donor bodies must now insist on transparency and
good governance, so must politicians grasp the challenge at the
national level. The new CPI makes it clear that an enormous task
lies ahead of them. They must set the framework for investment such
that the rule of law is applied and enforced fairly, not arbitrarily,
so that for instance extractive industries, such as oil-drilling,
are sustainable both for the natural environment and the development
of the local economy."
Tunku Abdul
Aziz, TI Vice-Chairman, speaking in Malaysia on the launch of the
CPI 2002, said: "The CPI has once again confirmed that corruption
is a malady afflicting not only the developing countries, but also
the developed world. Corruption is neutral. It is no respecter of
nations, big or small, rich or poor. It is all the more critical,
therefore, that both the North and the South buckle down to confront
corruption much more vigorously and decisively."
"Developed
countries have a special humanitarian responsibility," he continued,
"given the resources at their disposal, to investigate and
prosecute the companies within their jurisdictions that are bribing.
Their bribes and incentives to corrupt public officials and politicians
are subverting the orderly development of poor nations, already
trapped, as they are, in a vicious circle of crippling poverty,
hunger and disease."
Tunku Abdul
Aziz said: "Corruption continues to deny the poor, the marginalised,
and the least educated members of every society the social, economic
and political benefits that should properly accrue to them, benefits
that are taken for granted in societies that have managed to shake
off the yoke of corruption."
Some changes
highlighted in the CPI were identified by Peter Eigen. "In
the past year, we have seen setbacks to the credibility of democratic
rule. In parts of South America, the graft and misrule of political
elites have drained confidence in the democratic structures that
emerged after the end of military rule. Argentina, where corruption
is perceived to have soared, joins Panama, Honduras, Guatemala,
Nicaragua, Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Haiti and Paraguay with
a score of 3 or less in the CPI 2002."
While some countries
in transition from communism – most notably Slovenia, which has
a cleaner score than EU member countries Italy and Greece – are
perceived to be increasingly less corrupt, many countries in the
former Soviet Union remain ridden with corruption. "The recent
steps by President Vladimir Putin to introduce tax reforms and new
laws fighting money-laundering are beginning to show the prospect
of a lessening in perceived corruption in Russia," explained
Peter Eigen, "but the CPI 2002 indicates that Russia has a
long way to go and remains seriously corrupt, together with Uzbekistan,
Georgia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Moldova and Azerbaijan, all of which
score less than 3 out of 10".
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