Saturday 30 October 2010

U.S. slips to historic low in global corruption index | Reuters

U.S. slips to historic low in global corruption index

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    A couple pushes a stroller at the base of the Washington Monument, December 29, 2009. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

    By Dave Graham

    BERLIN | Tue Oct 26, 2010 11:53am EDT

    BERLIN

    (Reuters) - The United States has dropped out of the "top 20" in a global league table of least corrupt nations, tarnished by financial scandals and the influence of money in politics, Transparency International said on Tuesday.

    Somalia was judged the most corrupt country, followed by Myanmar and Afghanistan at joint second-worst and then by Iraq, in the Berlin-based watchdog TI's annual corruption perceptions index (CPI).

    The United States fell to 22nd from 19th last year, with its CPI score dropping to 7.1 from 7.5 in the 178-nation index, which is based on independent surveys on corruption.

    This was the lowest score awarded to the United States in the index's 15-year history and also the first time it had fallen out of the top 20.

    In the Americas, this put the United States behind Canada in sixth place, Barbados at 17th and Chile in 21st place.

    Jointly heading the index -- in which a score of 10 indicates a country with the highest standards, and 0 as highly corrupt -- were Denmark, New Zealand and Singapore with 9.3. They were also at the top of the table last year.

    Somalia scored 1.1. The watchdog group said its table was based on "different assessments and business opinion surveys carried out by independent and reputable institutions."

    U.S. "INTEGRITY DEFICIT"

    Nancy Boswell, president of TI in the United States, said lending practices in the subprime crisis, the disclosure of Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme and rows over political funding had all rattled public faith about prevailing ethics in America.

    "We're not talking about corruption in the sense of breaking the law," she said. "We're talking about a sense that the system is corrupted by these practices. There's an integrity deficit."

    Various financial scandals at state and city level had encouraged the impression that the regulatory oversight was weak and that influence could be bought, she added.

    The index showed a number of countries -- including Iran -- climbing up the chart significantly from 2009, though TI said this could often be ascribed to the fact that different surveys were being used that offered no direct comparison to last year.

    The fact that nearly three quarters of the countries scored 5.0 or less showed corruption was still a major global problem, said Robin Hodess, director of policy and research at TI.

    However, the watchdog identified Bhutan, Chile, Ecuador, Macedonia, Gambia, Haiti, Jamaica, Kuwait, and Qatar as states where improvement had been made over the past year.

    By contrast, it highlighted the Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Madagascar, Niger and the United States as nations where perceptions had deteriorated.

    (Editing by Andrew Roche)

    Comments

    Oct 26, 2010 5:27am EDT

    The US is more corrupt than ever; are we supposed to be surprised by this? What did you expect to happen when Roberts’ Activist Supreme Court gave the green light to corporations to spend as much as they wished on political smear ads, and not have to reveal that they had done so.

    McBob08 Report As Abusive

    Oct 26, 2010 5:56am EDT

    “Transparency International?”

    Who watches the Watchdog Group?

    Howling_Drunky Report As Abusive

    Oct 26, 2010 6:08am EDT

    Why am I not surprised. Gordon Gecko is alive and well in the US

    GretaG Report As Abusive

    Oct 26, 2010 6:22am EDT

    “We’re not talking about corruption in the sense of breaking the law.” “We’re talking about a sense that the system is corrupted”.

    Judging governments by this groups personal beliefs or, “a sense”, instead of quantitative factual data lessens their credibility.

    xm75 Report As Abusive

    Oct 26, 2010 6:45am EDT

    How about the whole list being published? I’d like to see where Ireland figures in all of this given the ‘economic downturn’ being the euphemism applied?

    bogger Report As Abusive

    Oct 26, 2010 6:48am EDT

    What should anyone have expected? A promise to “drain the swamp” has actually resulted in the swamp being filthier than ever.

    toby3061 Report As Abusive

    Oct 26, 2010 7:02am EDT

    The USA is losing its ability to have moral persuasion on the world stage. Very sad indeed!!

    kaceltd Report As Abusive

    Oct 26, 2010 7:16am EDT

    Sounds right. Sooner or later we will recognize that our orgy of spending for “fairness” (and votes) is based on the lack of morality by indebting our grandkids and lowering our international standing on every measure. Except those that play well on “Oprah”. (I feel so good about making myself feel good.)

    Do we ever want to feel proud about our country again in our lifetime?

    TomMariner Report As Abusive

    Oct 26, 2010 7:54am EDT

    The downfall of the Ameroman Empire is on course. After WWII everything went downhill for America. Behold the new world power: China and UAE

    thedownfall Report As Abusive



     

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