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| The world is getting more corrupt, and you won't believe who are the worst offenders. (Getty/AnthonyMarsland) |
‘This sort of corruption has mostly affected countries like Afghanistan, Cambodia, Iraq, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Venezuela, Mexico, and Colombia –- countries where agrarian and civil conflicts have divided the population and enabled governments to centralize power in big bureaucracies.’
By SANTIAGO WILLS
July 10, 2013
On Tuesday, Berlin-based watchdog Transparency
International released its Global Corruption Barometer 2013, a worldwide survey
of 114,000 people that analyzes bribery and corruption in 107 countries.
The report found that corruption and bribery are
prevalent across both developed and underdeveloped nations: More than 50
percent of respondents in the world said corruption had worsened in recent
years, and 27 percent admitted to paying bribes in order to access public
services and institutions.
Few respondents see an easy way out of this growing
problem. The majority of people don’t believe in their government’s
capabilities to fight corruption. Nearly 88 percent think that their leaders
are doing a poor job at it, and most blame public institutions as the main
corruption sources.
Here are five of the world’s most corrupt institutions,
according to the survey:
1) The Police
For years now, many people in rural areas of countries
like Mexico and Venezuela have learned an important lesson: If you have a
problem with the law, avoid the police, because you might end up with even more
problems.
In Mexico, cartels pay municipal police $100 million
every month, and more than 93 percent of drivers think traffic policemen are
corrupt. (One solution to that problem: female police officers.) In Venezuela,
the interior minister excoriated his entire force last month.
Those are some of the most extreme cases, but they
reflect a general worldwide distrust of cops. Across the globe, police received
3.7 rating on a 1 to 5 scale, where 1 means ‘not at all corrupt’ and 5 means
‘extremely corrupt’.
2) Judges
Few forms of corruption can hurt a country more than
judicial corruption. The rule of law tends to disappear when people don’t trust
the justice system. If you don’t think a judge can help you, there is a greater
chance you will take justice in your own hands or allow those who wronged you
to escape with impunity.
There are 20 countries where people think the judiciary
is the most corrupt institution. In these countries, 30 percent of the survey’s
respondents admitted that they had a paid bribe in order to help their cases.
3) Public Officials and Civil Servants
Government employees in charge of land, registry, health,
and education have a privileged position controlling access to certain grants
or assistance. They can easily ask for bribes.
This sort of corruption has mostly affected countries
like Afghanistan, Cambodia, Iraq, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Venezuela, Mexico, and
Colombia –- countries where agrarian and civil conflicts have divided the
population and enabled governments to centralize power in big bureaucracies.
On average, public officials received a 3.6 for
corruption on the 1-to-5 scale.
4) Political Parties
Citizens of Argentina, Greece, Colombia, the United
States, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Israel, Vanuatu, Uruguay, and Jamaica share one
belief: They think political parties are their country’s most corrupt
institutions. In total, 51 countries around the world expressed contempt for
political parties in the survey.
More than half of respondents think that their countries
are run by big interests looking out for themselves “entirely” or to a “large
extent.” It’s no surprise, then, that protesters in countries like Turkey,
Egypt, Chile, Spain, and Brazil have used political corruption as a rallying
cry.
In the U.S., 76 percent of respondents said that
political parties were affected by corruption. In Greece, the number is
currently at 90 percent.
5) The Citizenry
One of the largest problems when dealing with public
corruption is the people themselves. According to the report, 27 percent of
respondents said that they had paid a bribe in the past 12 months. As
Transparency International and other NGOs have repeatedly stated, this
ultimately sustains and encourages corruption.
The same goes for citizens' failures to report incidents
of corruption. The study found that 21 percent of the people surveyed are not
willing to report these incidents, and there are 16 countries where a majority
of respondents would prefer to remain silent, for fear of reprisals and lack of
faith in their governments.

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