* Italy below ex-communist Romania in
global league table
* China realises
tackling graft in its own interests-TI
* Russian
NGO curbs make it harder to check corruption -TI
By Gareth
Jones
BERLIN, Dec
5 (Reuters) - Greece has scored the worst ranking of all 27 European Union
nations in a global league table of perceived official corruption, falling
below ex-communist Bulgaria as public anger about graft soars during the
country's crisis.
The index
on state sector corruption, published by anti-corruption watchdog Transparency
International (TI) on Wednesday, also showed other struggling euro zone
countries scoring poorly such as Italy
which ranked below Romania .
Releasing
its annual corruption perceptions index, Berlin-based TI urged European and
other governments to try much harder to turn promises of fighting graft into
action in areas such as public tenders, political party financing and tax evasion.
"The
results of the survey should be a warning signal for the EU to require more
information and accountability from its member states," said TI's EU
analyst Jana Mittermaier, adding that this should apply also to current efforts
to establish European banking oversight.
Weak or
inefficient judicial systems, poor public audit services and cosy ties between
government and business all contribute to perceptions of corruption in some
European countries, she said.
TI's index,
which this year ranks 176 countries, measures perceptions of graft rather than
actual levels due to the secrecy that surrounds most corrupt dealings.
In the 2011
index, Greece was 80th with Bulgaria
scoring worst among the EU nations in 86th place.
Greeks have
long complained about corruption but anger has soared, particularly about tax
evasion among the rich, as the government has imposed wave after wave of
austerity that the country's international lenders have demanded.
The EU has
kept Bulgaria and Romania out of
its Schengen zone, which allows passport-free travel between member states, due
to concerns about corruption. A recent study showed Bulgarians gave about
150,000 bribes to civil servants every month last year, more than in 2010.
TI
cautioned that the 2012 rankings did not entirely reflect relatively recent
developments such as the advent of a reform-minded Italian government because
some of the research shaping the index dated back more than a year.
A BIG GAME
CHANGER
TI said there
was a stronger public recognition worldwide, including in big emerging
"BRIC" economies such as China
and Brazil ,
of the costs of corruption and a growing refusal to accept it as an inevitable
fact of life.
"Today
corruption is the world's most talked about social problem. It is very positive
that people around the world are demanding more accountability... This could be
a big game changer," TI Managing Director Cobus de Swardt told Reuters.
Among the
major global economies, the United States
ranked 19, up from 24, Germany
was at 13, up from 14, Japan
and Britain tied for 17th place
and France
was at 22, up from 25 last year.
Swardt said
it was worrying that two thirds of all countries surveyed ranked below 50 on
TI's new scale where 100 is perceived as most clean and 0 most corrupt.
"It is widely recognised today that high levels of corruption in the
public sector have hampered the global economic recovery," he said.
Corruption
has become a hot political issue fuelling protests from China and Russia to the Arab world.
CHINESE
STANDARDS
Last month,
state media quoted Communist Party chief Xi Jinping as saying that if
corruption was allowed to run wild, the Communist Party risked major unrest and
the collapse of its rule.
Swardt drew
comparisons with standards in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development, which groups wealthy nations. "We have seen a criminalisation
of bribery to the standards of the OECD," he said.
"The
Chinese used to say their companies could not be held to rich country standards
because they needed to catch up, but now they realise tackling this is in their
own interests."
But
tackling corruption in a lasting way required allowing ordinary citizens the
power to scrutinise public services and institutions, he added.
Elsewhere
among the so-called BRICs, Swardt said Russia 's new restrictions on
non-governmental organisations would make it harder to monitor and check
corruption. Russia
ranks 133rd in the 2012 global rankings, up from 143 last year.
With Russia
taking on the rotating presidency of the Group of 20 leading economies, Moscow
should try to "lead by example and not by the lowest common denominator in
terms of bribery", Swardt said.
Political
will has a big role to play in determining whether a country moves up or down
the corruption rankings, Swardt said. "Those countries stuck at the bottom
are often those where political elites are very unwilling to tackle the issues
in a serious manner," he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment