Majority of people worldwide believe corruption has worsened - governments less effective at curbing it since 2008 financial collapse
A majority of people worldwide believes corruption has worsened in the
last two years and they see governments as less effective at fighting it
since the 2008 financial crisis, a survey by Transparency International
organization showed on Tuesday.
The "Global Corruption Barometer" is
the biggest ever conducted by the Berlin-based watchdog, with 114,000
people responding in 107 countries in the survey of opinions on
corruption and which institutions are considered most corrupt.
The survey found that on a worldwide basis political parties are
considered to be the most corrupt institution, scoring 3.8 on a scale of
5 where 1 means "not at all corrupt" and 5 means "extremely corrupt."
Only 23 percent of those surveyed believed their government's efforts to
fight corruption were effective, down from 32 percent in 2008.
"Politicians themselves have much to do to regain trust," Transparency
International said in a release. "(The Barometer) shows a crisis of
trust in politics and real concern about the capacity of those
institutions responsible for bringing criminals to justice."
The second most corrupt institution on a global scale is the police with
a score of 3.7. Three categories of institutions - public
officials/civil servants, parliament/legislature and judiciary -
followed with equal scores of 3.6.
"It is the actors that are supposed to be running countries and
upholding the rule of law that are seen as the most corrupt, judged to
be abusing their positions of power and acting in their own interests
rather than for the citizens they are there to represent and serve,"
Transparency International wrote.
The media did not fare as badly, coming in at the ninth place out of
twelve with a score of 3.1, but it was seen as the most corrupt in
Australia and Britain. Some 69 percent said it was the most corrupt
institution in Britain, up from 39 percent three years ago.
"This very sharp jump is in large part due to the series of scandals
around phone hacking, the Leveson Inquiry and the concentration of media
ownership," said Robert Barrington, head of the British unit of
Transparency International.
The Leveson inquiry into the ethics of the British press was set up in
the wake of a scandal over phone-hacking at one of the newspapers of
Rupert Murdoch's media empire, which has a strong grip on the media in
both Australia and Britain.
The survey showed the business/private sector and the medical and health
services scored 3.3 on the corruption barometer, while the education
system came in next at eighth place with 3.2.
The military was seen as the 10th most corrupt institution worldwide
with a 2.9, followed by NGOs in 11th place at 2.7 and religious bodies
as the least corrupt institution with a 2.6 score.
Transparency International noted that even though religious bodies fared
best of the 12 major institutions overall, in some countries they are
nevertheless as being "highly corrupt". In particular in Israel, Japan,
Sudan and South Sudan, religious bodies scored above four on the scale
of 1 to 5.
Transparency International is a global organization that campaigns
against corruption. It has 90 chapters worldwide and tries to raise
awareness of the damaging effects of corruption and works to develop and
implement measures to tackle it.
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