'Most corrupt' tag on RP clarified
Official says previous report was misinterpreted
MANILA, Philippines--The Hong Kong-based Political and Economic Risk Consultancy (PERC)
said it did not single out the Philippines as the most corrupt in Asia,
noting that its report was “abused by people for their own political
ends.”
PERC’s clarification came nearly two months after the Philippine Daily Inquirer came out on March 14 with the banner headline, “RP ‘most corrupt’ in Asia—PERC,” which has been used extensively by the Genuine Opposition in its political ads during the campaign.
The story, which was run by other newspapers, was based on an
article by the Agence France-Presse wire service on the PERC report.
The Inquirer (parent company of INQUIRER.net) also interviewed PERC
managing director Robert Broadfoot for its banner story.
“I will try here to clarify the assertion attributed in some media
reports that PERC said the Philippines is the ‘No. 1 Most Corrupt
Country in Asia,’” Broadfoot said in a May 11 letter to Constancia de
Guzman, chair of the Presidential Anti-Graft Commission (PAGC).
“I can say categorically that we never made such an assertion. What
I believe the media reports did was look at a graph we had on the cover
of our corruption report without reading any of the text and jumped to
the wrong conclusion about what the graph represented,” Broadfoot said.
PERC’s clarification has come in in time for Monday’s elections in
which corruption has become one of the main issues that the GO claimed
would be a key factor in voting against President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo’s handpicked Team Unity senatorial candidates.
In a grading system with zero as the best possible score and 10 the
worst, the Philippines got 9.40, worsening sharply from its grade of
7.80 last year, AFP said. It added that Indonesia was deemed Asia’s
most corrupt country in 2006, while Singapore and Hong Kong were seen
as the cleanest economies.
AFP on Sunday referred the Inquirer to the original AFP story, which ran on March 13.
AFP said in its story: “’The Philippines has the distinction of
being perceived in the worst light this year,” PERC said after polling
almost 1,500 expatriate business executives in 13 Asian countries and
territories across the region in January and February.
The lead paragraph of the AFP report read: “The Philippines is
perceived by foreign businessmen as Asia’s most corrupt economy,
according to a survey Tuesday that also found other countries failing
to tackle the problem.”
Broadfoot explained that the grade given by PERC to each country did
not rate the level of corruption between Asian countries “but how
expatriates working in individual Asian countries perceived the
variable of corruption was a factor influencing the environment in
which they are working.”
“Respondents provided scores only for the country in which they were
working. This means that numbers are more useful for measuring how
perceptions in any given country are changing over time, not how one
country compares with other Asian countries. The different audiences
have different biases,” he said.
Broadfoot said that while the “score here (Philippines) was very bad
in absolute terms, compared with earlier surveys we have done on the
Philippines, and with perceptions held by expatriates in other Asian
countries, this does not mean that absolute levels of corruption have
worsened.”
He said expatriates were just more focused on the problem of corruption in the public sector than they were before.
He noted that the media failed to report that respondents gave a
favorable rating to the problem of corruption in the private sector,
“which is not bad at all either in absolute terms or compared with
perceptions in other Asian countries.”
“This perception was generally not reflected at all in media reports
and runs very counter to the generalized assertion that the Philippines
is the most corrupt country in Asia,” he said.
The Inquirer said in its banner story that the perceived corruption
in the private sector (a score of 4.15) was not as bad as that in the
public sector (an average score of 9).
In the AFP report, PERC said the protracted corruption trial of
deposed President Joseph Estrada “is an example of the problem and
probably explains why respondents to our survey were so negative in
their assessment” of the country.
“It [corruption] is bad and has been bad all along. People are just
growing tired of the inaction and insincerity of leading officials when
they promise to fight corruption,” AFP said, quoting PERC.
In the Inquirer interview, Broadfoot said it might be inappropriate
to compare the Philippine’ corruption rating with those of other Asia
countries.
Of the 1,476 expatriate businessmen PERC polled in the region, more than 100 were based in the Philippines.
In his letter, Broadfoot said the issue of corruption “can be abused by people for their own political ends.”
“Corruption is also something that can and is being politicized in
ways that are not particularly helpful to the country’s development but
only serve to push the political agendas of those seizing upon the
topic in a particular way,” he said.
Broadfoot said PERC did not want to “downplay either the magnitude
of the problem of corruption in the Philippines or its impact on the
country’s economic and social development.”
He said it was important to combat corruption not only on the substantive level but also on the public relations level.
De Guzman said Broadfoot’s letter should put an end to the
misinformation peddled by the opposition that the country was the most
corrupt country in Asia.
“The damage has been done but nothing is really too late. Mr.
Broadfoot had clarified the issue verbally before but we convinced him
to put it down in writing so the people would not believe the wrong
report,” said De Guzman.
“We all know there is a corruption problem in our country but all
this black propaganda that we are the worst in Asia is only setting
back our efforts to solve the problem,” the PAGC chair said.
Copyright 2007 Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Here is a part of the PERC report on the Corruption Perception Report.
The Trend of Corruption in
1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | |
8.06 | 6.97 | 9.00 | 9.11 | 7.88 | 7.00 | 8.33 | 7.48 | 7.68 | 7.58 | |
3.03 | 2.74 | 4.06 | 2.49 | 3.77 | 3.33 | 3.61 | 3.60 | 3.50 | 3.13 | |
8.20 | 7.40 | 9.17 | 9.50 | 9.25 | 9.17 | 9.30 | 8.90 | 8.63 | 6.76 | |
8.67 | 8.95 | 9.91 | 9.88 | 9.67 | 9.92 | 9.33 | 9.25 | 9.10 | 8.16 | |
4.60 | 5.00 | 4.25 | 3.90 | 2.50 | 3.25 | 4.50 | 3.00 | 3.46 | 3.01 | |
N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 4.78 | |
5.80 | 5.38 | 7.50 | 5.50 | 6.00 | 5.71 | 6.00 | 7.33 | 6.80 | 6.13 | |
6.50 | 7.17 | 6.71 | 8.67 | 9.00 | 8.00 | 7.67 | 8.33 | 8.80 | 7.80 | |
1.05 | 1.43 | 1.55 | 0.71 | 0.83 | 0.90 | 0.38 | 0.50 | 0.65 | 1.30 | |
7.71 | 7.12 | 8.20 | 8.33 | 7.00 | 5.75 | 5.50 | 6.67 | 6.50 | 5.44 | |
5.96 | 5.20 | 6.92 | 6.89 | 6.00 | 5.83 | 6.33 | 6.10 | 6.15 | 5.91 | |
7.49 | 8.29 | 7.57 | 8.20 | 8.55 | 8.89 | 8.75 | 7.80 | 7.20 | 7.64 | |
8.00 | 8.25 | 8.50 | 9.20 | 9.75 | 8.25 | 8.83 | 8.71 | 8.65 | 7.91 |
Grades range from zero to 10, with
zero being the best grade possible and 10 the worst.
The specific survey question asked
was: “How big is the problem of
corruption in terms of its being a feature influencing the overall business
environment?"
*********Years under the former Philippine President Joseph E. Estrada
REGIONAL OVERVIEW
This is our annual report assessing
corruption trends in
There is a lot of information to digest, so we will let the raw figures
do the talking in the country-specific sections of this report, while confining
our written analysis to this regional overview.
Between January and the February 24th we received more than
1,200 replies to a mail survey and face-to-face interviews we conducted of
expatriates working in
In most countries we received around 100 replies, although the sampling
size was smaller in
respectively). In all cases respondents
were asked to assess conditions in the country in which they were working as
well as in their home country. This
means that while it is interesting to make cross-country comparisons, this
survey is more useful for evaluating how perceptions in any given country are
changing over time.
There is some good news on the
corruption front in
Expatriate perceptions of the problem are improving in most
countries. We have come to this conclusion
through two measures. One is comparing
this year’s to last year’s scores to the survey question: “How big is the problem of corruption in
terms of its being a feature influencing the overall business environment?” The score showed an improvement in 10 of the
12 countries we surveyed for both years, while it deteriorated in only two of
the countries surveyed.
The other
measure that indicates expatriates perceive the problem of corruption to be
lessening in more countries than it is worsening is a separate survey
question. We specifically asked if respondents
perceive the trend of corruption to be decreasing, staying the same, or
increasing. In 11 out of the 13
countries we surveyed this year (for the first time we added
they felt the problem of graft is decreasing, while they pointed to a
deteriorating problem in only two countries.
One was
matter which measure is used. In the
case of the
respondents were asked about the trend, but this year’s survey score assessing
the level of corruption is actually better than last year’s score. On the other hand,
last when respondents were asked to provide a score for the level of
corruption, but the same respondents who replied this year indicated that they
felt the problem of corruption is decreasing in the
The perception trend in these countries is therefore less clear than in
corruption has been underscored twice.
been intensifying in recent months – to the point where they could affect
political stability. The prime minister
and his family company, Shin Corp., are at the center of many of the
controversies, as evidenced by the recent uproar over his family’s 73.3-billion
baht sale of its controlling stake in Shin Corp. to a
accuse him of amending a law on foreign ownership of Thai telecom firms so his
family could benefit from the completion of the deal. The government’s defense is that: “The law
was amended to encourage foreign investment, not to favor the prime minister’s
family.”
Such is the problem of corruption –
not just in developing countries, but also in developed ones like the
like the World Bank. When it gets high
enough in the political process, the legal system and the legislative
institutions responsible for passing laws can be co-opted to the point where
they are a central part of the problem. The
line between corruption and legal legislative change can be very blurry. Just look at the recent lobbying scandal in
the
elected figures of all major parties are involved. As the Financial
Times wrote in its January 17 editorial on this scandal: “Nowhere else in
the civilized world is it so widely accepted that money buys access and
influence over policy and that interest groups must ‘pay to play’.” This helps to keep the problem of corruption
in
It would be wrong to lay the blame
for corruption in
to political power and will remain a problem after he leaves office. Cases like the contract scandals involving
the construction of Bangkok’s new international airport and road building
projects that can greatly influence property values in ways that reap a
windfall for people “in-the-know” are just a few of the examples of corruption
that can arise from the country’s notoriously opaque government procurement
process that have little to do with any single individual but with the entire
system. As our survey shows, expatriates
in
much bigger in the public sector than the private sector, which raises
questions about the government’s determination to fight the problem and the
effectiveness of the judicial system at prosecuting
and punishing individuals for corruption when abuses are uncovered.
In the conflict-of-interest inquiry
involving the prime minister and the company he founded,
could have resulted in the Thai leader’s dismissal. The court vote was
good sign – this would not happen in some other Asian countries. And the fact that six judges voted to accept
the petition indicates there is still a degree of judicial independence. But the whole affair has hurt
and it could still contribute to an increase in political and social
instability in the Kingdom in the relatively near future.
surveyed. That dubious distinction was
once again reserved for
However, to give the government of
headway in fighting the problem – at least that is
what 27% of the respondents living in that country indicated, while the remaining
73% felt it was staying the same. No one
we surveyed this year felt the problem was intensifying. Moreover, this year’s score for
four-year improving trend (comparing year-to-year survey scores), and the magnitude
of improvement over the past year is much bigger than any of the previous
years. In other words, President Susilo
seems to be making a favorable impression on expatriates working in the country
with his anti-corruption drive. No one
is expecting this problem to be fixed overnight, especially when the judicial
system is so weak and such a central part of the problem rather than the
solution. However, the government’s
anti-corruption efforts to date have contributed to a greater sense of optimism
that could help to underpin the economic recovery.
Although
than last, it is still the place in
of corruption is least. This means the
government in
anti-corruption image into a feature that is an incentive attracting foreign
investors, especially since neighboring countries are graded so much more
critically.
Critics of
different view of the problem of corruption.
They accuse the ruling People’s Action Party of being extremely corrupt
and of undermining the independence of institutions like the judiciary. However, this is not a view that is shared by
the vast majority of international businessmen working in
executives of multinationals and banks elsewhere in
that include
Such observers are less interested in how domestic politics are played
than in how the regulatory, monitoring and judicial systems function and how
bureaucrats carry out their duties relating to the business environment. Our survey scores year after year show business
people are very favorably impressed.
From their perspective, corruption is not tolerated and the system can
be used to fight it when it is encountered.
This was brought home last week when
the former finance director of China Aviation Oil (Singapore) Corp., which
collapsed in 2004 after it lost US$550 million trading oil derivatives, was
sentenced to two years in prison and fined S$150,000 for releasing false
financial statements concealing losses incurred by the company and for
“cheating” and deceiving Deutsche Bank AG to induce the bank to buy a 15% stake
in listed CAO Singapore from its Chinese-government-owned parent.
Like
corruption, and this has enhanced its credentials as a regional business
center, especially as a support base for
corruption is much worse. There were
concerns that corruption would intensify as a problem following
1997, and perceptions did indeed deteriorate immediately following the
handover. However, the government and
the Independent Commission Against Corruption have
done a good job in assuaging these fears.
The SAR’s latest corruption score is the
lowest in almost a decade.
This does not mean corruption has
been beaten in
admits that the cases involving corruption are becoming more complex. There is a growing cross-border dimension to
the problem, which limits the ability of the local authorities to investigate
and prosecute certain cases. Also many
of the forms of corruption that occur in the private sector are extremely
difficult to collect evidence on in order to proceed with arrests and
prosecutions. For example, irregular
payments that change hands between groups like building supervisors (working on
their own behalf, not on their employers), decorators, real estate agents and
maintenance firms occur so frequently that they are almost systemic, but trying
to fight these problems is like wrestling with ghosts. Still, one of the most important achievements
government has reduced its own level of corruption, cleaned up the local police
force, and educated the public so that there is an extremely low level of
tolerance for corruption. People fight
it when they encounter it; they are much less prone to simply shrug their
shoulders the way people in many other Asian countries do.
The Hong Kong ICAC, police and
judicial system deserve most of the credit for maintaining the territory’s good
image, but they have been helped by Mainland
corruption problem. Graft is still a
huge problem in
serious about its anti-corruption campaign.
Perhaps most importantly so many foreign companies have invested in
that expatriates have much more experience.
The veil of mystery has been lifted.
business is also changing how business is done in the Mainland. The more familiar that both foreigners and
Chinese become in dealing with each other, the easier it is to get things done
without bumping into walls that people once thought required payoffs of some
sort to get over or around. Other
factors contributing to a reduction in corruption in China include the need to
adopt certain institutional reforms in order to comply with WTO standards and
requirements, pressures on state-owned companies to improve their governance
and transparency in order to be in a position to list on foreign stock markets,
and once they list on those markets like Hong Kong these same companies are
under even more pressure to adhere to higher standards than they were
accustomed to in the past.
Possibly the biggest systemic
problem
lack of channels individuals have to address their grievances and seek
redress. Most corruption problems in the
Mainland are at the local level. They
usually involve local level officials abusing their powers. The problem is that these same people control
the channels for addressing grievances, which means people have an incentive to
avoid the channels altogether and appeal directly to the national
authorities. The only way they can get
the attention of these top-level leaders is to stage demonstrations that are
large enough to catch their eye, but this contributes to the kind of social
instability that scares the national-level leaders most. Therefore the problem of corruption in
all of which are threatening. One is the
corruption itself. Another is the social
backlash arising from the corruption and the difficulty the present system has
in managing this backlash properly except through repression.
and
of the country is
that was a Portuguese colony until it reverted to Chinese sovereignty on
Continental European law, as distinct from
being the “
However, with assistance from Mainland
down fast on organized crime. It set up
its own Commission Against Corruption, which in many
ways modeled itself after
training of
ended the gambling monopoly and opened up the industry to foreign investment. Several of the leading American gaming
companies jumped at the opportunity to invest, but they had (and still have)
compliance issues with the
have to follow in
overall standards so that threats like money laundering and other illegal
activities could be policed against more effectively. Such abuses still happen, as they do in
authorities are turning a blind eye.
When cases are uncovered, they are prosecuted.
At the same time, foreign investment
has flooded into the Macao SAR. There
are many more non-Portuguese expatriates living and working there today than
there has ever been (this is one reason why we are including
first time). Many
have also invested in property in
retreat. As a result possibly no city in
as
years. It has not lost the appeal of a
much more laid-back lifestyle than
“getting its act together.”
Although we never surveyed
perceptions of corruption in
willing to bet that pre-handover expatriate perceptions would have been very
negative – probably not at the bottom of our ranking table but certainly deep
in the bottom half. This is not the case
today.
It still has quite a way to go before its reputation matches that of
best slot in our ranking table.
economies covered in our survey. It is
really just a city and its total permanent population is only about 500,000, so
what works in a place this small would be more difficult to accomplish in a
much bigger country. This qualification
notwithstanding,
make a tangible impact on corruption perceptions when there is a really
determined effort to do so, and it is no coincidence that the fall in
corruption has been accompanied by a boom in the economy and a surge in foreign
direct investment. It supports the
theory that corruption is bad for business.
We find it interesting that
“Greater China” with yet a completely different legal system. This year’s score for
ago, but it is still in line with the longer-term trend of perceptions, which
highlights one of the government’s biggest problems. When Chen Shui-bian and the DPP gained political
power, they campaigned on an anti-corruption platform. It was easy to identify abuses by the KMT,
and the DPP promised to clean house.
People have grown more than a little impatient that so little progress
has been made. Today critics of the
government are scoring points by highlighting its own involvement with
corruption. It was one of the key issues
that cost the DPP support in last year’s local elections, and if the DPP cannot
turn this image around, it will be one of the issues that could do it the most
damage in the next presidential elections.
Throughout the 1990s,
fighting corruption than
when, for the first time,
than
2004 and 2005, but
this. One of the most important is that
the Korea Independent Commission Against Corruption has
stepped up its fight against graft and has done of much better job of
publicizing its successes than have anti-corruption bodies in
tainted by corruption scandals themselves.
For example, last July the head of investigation at Taiwan’s official
Financial Supervisory Commission, which was set up to look into alleged
security market irregularities, resigned following reports that he was
“coaching” some of the biggest stock market speculators on ways to cover up insider
trading and other irregularities.
Like the
political funding and lobbying. But also
like the
they have been aggressively prosecuted.
that can claim to have sent former presidents to jail for corruption. Close relatives of leading political figures
have also been successfully prosecuted and jailed for graft. On the one hand, this shows that graft
remains a big problem. On the other
hand, it shows the public’s tolerance of the problem is decreasing and the
country’s anti-corruption institutions have teeth that they are willing to
use.
Several of the families behind the
country’s largest companies have also been embarrassed by scandals relating to
their attempts to by-pass inheritance taxes and pass on wealth from one
generation to the next. Samsung, the
biggest chaebol, is currently trying to dig itself out of such scandals. This is a dimension of
prominent in
counterpart to
on practices by extremely wealthy individuals that might have been tolerated in
the past but are no longer considered to be acceptable.
The roots of the problem in
business and politics, specifically, the “iron triangle” that ties industry,
bureaucrats and politicians together in relationships that were considered to
be acceptable practice until recently.
However, perceptions of what is right and wrong are changing. This was shown last year when police arrested
14 executives from 11 heavy-industry companies, including sector leader
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, in connection with bid rigging for bridge
contracts from the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport. Prosecutors said 47 companies were linked to
rigged contracts worth an estimated 350 billion yen a year. They also said the collusion had been going
on since the 1960s.
forward in its anti-corruption fight this year when a revised anti-monopoly law
is to come into force that will increase fines for companies found to have
participated in bid-rigging. Still the
close relationship structure between business and politics is intact. State bureaucrats are still being employed in
private and public corporations, particularly those under their ministry’s
jurisdiction, in a practice known as amakudari. In the
heavy-industry bid-rigging scandal, for example, it emerged that there were
more than 30 former state officials among the cartel members. These types of connections between business,
bureaucrats and politicians will make it extremely difficult to eradicate
anti-competitive schemes and to promote greater transparency and disclosure
practices.
However, it would be wrong to paint
executives of multinationals continue to regard
countries covered in our survey and is an improvement on last year. Corruption does not seriously detract from
the attractiveness of the overall business environment, nor is it a deterrent
to multinationals’ willingness to invest or expand their business in the
country.
Expatriates working in
on that country’s corruption situation.
The magnitude of the perception change compared with one year ago was
much bigger than for any other country covered, and the latest score is by far
the best that
decade. Why this is so is not at all
obvious. The same respondents were quite
negative in their assessment of the government’s determination to fight
corruption and the judicial system’s effectiveness at prosecuting and punishing
individuals for corruption when abuses are uncovered. However, more than 40% of the respondents
were of the opinion that corruption is lessening as a problem.
One possibility for this sense of
optimism might have less to do with any change in the actual magnitude of
corruption than with the growing bullishness many foreign investors are feeling
towards business opportunities. For
years
offices of multinationals. However, this
is changing. Foreign companies are
starting to line up at the door and international leaders are visiting the
country to solidify relations. The focus
is shifting away from
bureaucracy and rigid labor laws to its “positives” like the huge pool of
technically skilled labor and its growing domestic market potential.
government effectiveness, but it has a much better reputation for rule of law
and freedom of speech, which helps to provide a check on corruption and avenues
for victims of the problem to voice their grievances in ways that are not
available in
survey with a communist government.
Although the absolute score is still high – the second worst of all
countries surveyed – the latest grade marks the fifth consecutive year of
improvement. Like
investors gain experience in
navigate the system without falling into the many corruption pitfalls that
exist.
Still, the consensus view is that
corruption is a huge problem in a system where authorities have vast discretionary
power over business decisions. There is
also a lack of transparency since the state controls the media. The public sees what the government wants it
to see, and as in
profile examples of its treatment of corruption. This way it can create the impression that it
is serious about cracking down on graft, but it does not have to tackle the
problem comprehensively. If it did it wold risk undermining the Party’s grassroots support base
of local cadres.
The judicial system itself is so
infested with corruption that it is difficult to see how it can be effective in
stamping out graft. More than 400
officials working in the legal system were charged last year with criminal
offences, most of which were related to corruption offences such as
bribe-taking. In one of the most embarrassing cases for the government – but
also one that best represents the deeply ingrained nature of the problem – last
October the head of the country’s anti-corruption inspection taskforce and
deputy director of the government’s Inspection Department was arrested and
accused of receiving money and land from some oil and gas officials. The official was appointed to investigate
state-owned oil and gas giant PetroVietnam between
2002 and 2003, but failed to prove any major incidence of corruption. Police later uncovered several cases of
serious wrongdoing.
Still, as in
convicted of corruption are frequently much more severe than penalties for
similar offenses in developed Western countries. For example, in the case of the oil and gas
scandal, seven officials received jail sentences ranging from four years to
life imprisonment for being involved in falsifying a US$17-million contract.
problem as
vulnerabilities of the government. Prime
Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi made fighting graft
his top priority after taking over from Dr. Mahathir Mohamad
in 2003, but he has been criticized for not following through with his
pledge. The problem is seen to be worse
in the public sector than the private sector.
Indeed, in our latest survey
the gap between the grades for corruption in the public sector and private
sector was wider. The silver lining to
this is that it is not a huge deterrent to foreign investors, since many of the
kinds of corruption that exist are not seen to affect them directly. However, it is a black mark on the
government’s image and is giving opposition politicians like Anwar Ibrahim an opening to
broaden their base of support by attacking the government’s record on graft.
it faces constant criticism for chasing after the ikan billis or small fish. Left untouched are
the relatives and friends of high officials who have used their connections to
obtain lucrative licenses and other concessions. Moreover, judging from the recent Cabinet
reshuffle, Mr. Abdullah is not in strong enough position to really change the
status quo. He made only minor changes,
and none of the tainted veterans from Mahathir Mohamad’s
era, who were all retained in 2003, were dropped. This is being interpreted by most observers
as evidence that Mr. Abdullah is reluctant to upset vested political and
business interests.
The problem of vested political and
business interests is even more entrenched in the
seem to be designed more as a tactic in political brinksmanship than as a
serious attempt to actually tackle the problem at is core. President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo came to power in 2001 when her predecessor, Joseph Estrada, was swept
from office on charges of corruption.
Now Mrs. Arroyo herself is facing allegations of corruption and poll
cheating.
In our previous reports on
corruption, the Philippines is usually the only country where we regularly
receive complaints from people in the private and public sector that we are too
harsh in our assessment of corruption. They point to the existence of an
ombudsman responsible for investigating and prosecuting corruption, and they
claim this office does an excellent job. These are not views that we share,
nor, it seems, do the vast majority of the respondents to our survey. Their scores for the problem of corruption in
the
critical. The official ombudsman might
indeed be a person of high integrity and fighting the problem of graft as hard
as he can, but the resources of his office are limited relative to the scale of
the job. Indonesia was the only country
to receive a worse grade for the variable assessing the tolerance of average
citizens of corruption, while only Indonesia and Vietnam had governments that
were rated “less serious” about fighting corruption. In view of the recent record of Indonesian
President Susilo and the actual penalties that have been handed down in some
corruption cases in
status quo with respect to corruption is about to change.
Political and Economic Risk Consultancy, Ltd.- PERC
20/F, Central Tower
28 Queen's Road, Central, Hong Kong
Mailing Address: G.P.O. Box 1342, Hong Kong
Tel: (852) 2541 4088 | Fax: (852) 2815 5032 | Email: info@asiarisk.com .
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i really can not agree more. i think this is also one very truthful example that we have too much freedom. The media, Philippine media tend to abuse its freedom of the press to exaggerated proportions and sensationalize the news. when i lived abroad, everybody's image of the philippines is that of smokey mountain (extreme poverty), dog eating drunks and religious fanatics (crucifixions in pampanga) now you tell me as filipinos, are these three things that common in our daily lives? (edited to add proportions after exaggerated)
ReplyDeletePrecisement! I dont even want to dignify the quality of media in this country. Geez, sometimes I dont want to watch the news or read the papers anymore. One time, I read a positive business news online (Inquirer.net), on its last paragraph, the writer has to insert the most corrupt tag.. tsk tsk.
ReplyDelete*out of the topic
ReplyDeletehow come intelectually inclined boys are soooo uber hot
well, that's good to know.. it's somehow in a weird way reassuring that we wont suck forever! hahaha.. ;P
ReplyDeleteBecause the brain is the sexiest part of anyone's body! ;)
ReplyDeleteWe dont suck Josh, au contraire, if you check out my other blogs, I posted some other good stuff about the Philippines. Things that the mainstream doesnt want to cover.
ReplyDeleteIf you look at the trend of corruption table more closely, you'd be surprised to see that Vietnam (where I work and live now) was even worse than the Philippines back during Erap's reign which, up until now, remains unchanged. However, what I see and feel here in Vietnam now, despite all the alleged corruption in the system, is something I wish I would in the Philippines. This is a strange case, perhaps, where corruption and economic development may not necessarily be correlated with each other. Assuming Vietnam is corrupt as hell indicated in the trend table, then how come it is the 3rd most attractive market in the world (2006 Global Retail Index). Import and Export trade indicators have positive slopes, and living standards (expenditure/population) have increased by a whopping 40% from 1999 to 2004. Anyways, my only point is this - maybe corruption is really bad, most especially from an philosophico-ethical perspective. But maybe, just maybe, it would do everyone well if the economy were growing fast despite all the corruption that exist in the system. That may be a paradox, but if it works, why not.
ReplyDeleteWell, Vietnam and China perhaps bucks the perception of corruption these countries vis-a-vis economic development for several reasons.
ReplyDelete1) While the government or the sectors concerned are perceived as generally corrupt, there is a relatively strong, and stable political system that emanates from an equally strong leadership that is very supportive of investments and business in general, compared to the freewheeling democratic mess that the Philippines seems to be caught in a viciously repetitive cycle pretty much reminiscent of a Latin American style of political culture.
2)China, while corrupt, remains to be an attractive as an investment destination- its enormous population translate to huge market, and basically cheap manufacturing costs.
3)Business practices are more conducive in Vietnam and China - no pesky militant labor leaders, no outrageous foreign ownership rules, and like I said, a pretty consistent government line towards attracting new business and improving existing ones.
Of course, I agree with you.
ReplyDeleteBonus, here's a screen capture of the 2006 Global Retail Index:
:)
I guess they only polled 30 countries yes?
ReplyDeleteIm going to post the Global Competitiveness Index, Ease of Doing Business and Economic Freedom lists soon... It could be...
ReplyDeleteseems to me that these are emerging retail markets - they probably polled more than what the table shows.
ReplyDeleteIt could be, ut usually as practiced, once a country is polled it is usually included in the list for reference.
ReplyDeleteTrue. :)
ReplyDeleteIt is? How come I don't see it even in good porn movies?
ReplyDeleteHahaha. Seriously, yes - the brain is, indeed, the sexiest part. Without it, everything else becomes a frill. ;)
I always find people with brains incredibly sexy. Brains and looks and the right attitude are killer combinations. Usually I engage with a lot of intellectual foreplay and intellectual fucking before getting really physical.
ReplyDeleteThanks god!
ReplyDeleteAng galing ng South Korea at India... Inspiring how they were able to rise above their level of curruption.
ReplyDeleteIt's all about political will and education of its people.
ReplyDeletei super agree with political will.
ReplyDeletebut that will has to be a collective truth for it to work
Unfortunately, the tribalistic and clannish attitudes of the people prevent it from happening..
ReplyDeleteyeah. i checked it out and it's totally right on the moolah.. *sigh* the media only wants headlines that read the doom of our country. how sad.
ReplyDeleteIt is so true. So let's spread the good word! :D
ReplyDeleteno big.. sure!
ReplyDelete