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Corrupt
political elites and unscrupulous investors kill sustainable
growth in its tracks. That is the conclusion Peter Eigen,
chair of Transparency
International, made in August 2002 when the
latest Corruption Perceptions Index was released. Eigen
noted that economic and social crisis would occur globally if
no further action against corruption were taken by governments.
Transparency
International is the only international
non-governmental organisation devoted to combating corruption.
It has national chapters in more than ninety countries. The
organisation was founded in 1993, and released the first
corruption perceptions index in 1995. The index is based on a
large variety of credible sources. In total, fifteen sources
originating from nine independent organisations have been used
in the recent index. This time, Transparency International
covered 198 countries and territories, 96 of which, however,
had fewer than three sources and were thus excluded from the
index.
According
to Transparency International, Finland, Denmark, and
New Zealand are the world's least corrupt countries.
All these countries received a score close to 10, which
means that corruption is almost not existing. Among the most
corrupt countries in the world are Indonesia (1.9), Paraguay
(1.7), Nigeria (1.6), and Bangladesh (1.2).
As
to East Asia, Japan (7.1) is the least corrupt country
followed by Taiwan with a score of 5.6 (see Table
1). South Korea received 4.5. China scored 3.5
and thus is the region's most corrupt country included in the
survey. (Mongolia and North Korea were excluded from the index
since only one survey was available.) In the case of China (Hong
Kong), eleven surveys from six institutions were used as
reference (see Table
2), and one (Opacity Index) more to analyse
corruption in Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan.
Compared
with EU member states, Hong Kong (8.2) is less corrupt than
Austria (7.8) and Germany (7.3). Belgium and Spain are as
corrupt as Japan (7.1) and the latter is less corrupt than
Ireland (6.9), France (6.3), and Portugal (6.3). Taiwan has
less perceived corruption than Italy (5.2), and South Korea
less than Greece (4,2) which is the most corrupt country
within the European Union. It is interesting to note that
several EU applicants have even worse scores: Bulgaria (4.0),
Poland (4.0), Czech Republic (3.7), Latvia (3.7), Slovak
Republic (3.7), and Romania (2.6).
See
also Global
Corruption Report 2003 East Asia by Lu
Xiao-bo and the Media
Role: Covering or Covering Up Corruption by
Bettina Peters
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