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Santo Domingo.- Transparency International presented its annual report in Berlin today and just like in 2008 Dominican Republic’s Corruption Perception Index (CPI) scored 3.0 in a scale from a low of zero to high of 10, but ranks it 99 in a list of 180 countries, three points better than last year.

The global organization said it used several surveys to establish its Corruption Perception Index (CPI) to assign nations a score for 2009.

New Zealand again scores high and this year together with Denmark and Singapore, tops the list as the least corrupt country.

The country is ranked 3 in a range which includes Bosnia and Herzegovina, Jamaica and Zambia, but tops nations in the region such as Argentina (2.9), Bolivia (2.7), Honduras (2.5) and Nicaragua (2.5).

The nations on the bottom rung of the list include Haiti (1.8), Afghanistan (1.3) and Somalia (1.1)

PRESS RELEASE

BERLIN.- As the world economy begins to register a tentative recovery and some nations continue to wrestle with ongoing conflict and insecurity, it is clear that no region of the world is immune to the perils of corruption, according to Transparency International’s 2009 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), a measure of domestic, public sector corruption released today.

“At a time when massive stimulus packages, fast-track disbursements of public funds and attempts to secure peace are being implemented around the world, it is essential to identify where corruption blocks good governance and accountability, in order to break its corrosive cycle” said Huguette Labelle, Chair of Transparency International (TI).

The vast majority of the 180 countries included in the 2009 index score below five on a scale from 0 (perceived to be highly corrupt) to 10 (perceived to have low levels of corruption). The CPI measures the perceived levels of public sector corruption in a given country and is a composite index, drawing on 13 different expert and business surveys. The 2009 edition scores 180 countries, the same number as the 2008 CPI.

Fragile, unstable states that are scarred by war and ongoing conflict linger at the bottom of the index. These are: Somalia, with a score of 1.1, Afghanistan at 1.3, Myanmar at 1.4 and Sudan tied with Iraq at 1.5. These results demonstrate that countries which are perceived as the most corrupt are also those plagued by long-standing conflicts, which have torn apart their governance infrastructure.

When essential institutions are weak or non-existent, corruption spirals out of control and the plundering of public resources feeds insecurity and impunity. Corruption also makes normal a seeping loss of trust in the very institutions and nascent governments charged with ensuring survival and stability.

Countries at the bottom of the index cannot be shut out from development efforts. Instead, what the index points to is the need to strengthen their institutions. Investors and donors should be equally vigilant of their operations and as accountable for their own actions as they are in demanding transparency and accountability from beneficiary countries.

“Stemming corruption requires strong oversight by parliaments, a well performing judiciary, independent and properly resourced audit and anti-corruption agencies, vigorous law enforcement, transparency in public budgets, revenue and aid flows, as well as space for independent media and a vibrant civil society,” said Labelle. “The international community must find efficient ways to help war-torn countries to develop and sustain their own institutions.”

Highest scorers in the 2009 CPI are New Zealand at 9.4, Denmark at 9.3, Singapore and Sweden tied at 9.2 and Switzerland at 9.0. These scores reflect political stability, long-established conflict of interest regulations and solid, functioning public institutions.

Overall results in the 2009 index are of great concern because corruption continues to lurk where opacity rules, where institutions still need strengthening and where governments have not implemented anti-corruption legal frameworks.

Even industrialised countries cannot be complacent: the supply of bribery and the facilitation of corruption often involve businesses based in their countries. Financial secrecy jurisdictions, linked to many countries that top the CPI, severely undermine efforts to tackle corruption and recover stolen assets.

“Corrupt money must not find safe haven. It is time to put an end to excuses,” said Labelle. “The OECD’s work in this area is welcome, but there must be more bilateral treaties on information exchange to fully end the secrecy regime. At the same time, companies must cease operating in renegade financial centres.”

Bribery, cartels and other corrupt practices undermine competition and contribute to massive loss of resources for development in all countries, especially the poorest ones. Between 1990 and 2005, more than 283 private international cartels were exposed that cost consumers around the world an estimated US $300 billion in overcharges, as documented in a recent TI report.

With the vast majority of countries in the 2009 index scoring below five, the corruption challenge is undeniable. The Group of 20 has made strong commitments to ensure that integrity and transparency form the cornerstone of a newfound regulatory structure. As the G20 tackles financial sector and economic reforms, it is critical to address corruption as a substantial threat to a sustainable economic future. The G20 must also remain committed to gaining public support for essential reforms by making institutions such as the Financial Stability Board and decisions about investments in infrastructure, transparent and open to civil society input.

Globally and nationally, institutions of oversight and legal frameworks that are actually enforced, coupled with smarter, more effective regulation, will ensure lower levels of corruption. This will lead to a much needed increase of trust in public institutions, sustained economic growth and more effective development assistance. Most importantly, it will alleviate the enormous scale of human suffering in the countries that perform most poorly in the Corruption Perceptions Index.

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COMMENTS
24 comment(s)
Written by: juanb, 17 Nov 2009 10:08 AM
From: Dominican Republic
bs
Written by: Blutarsky This user is banned, 17 Nov 2009 10:10 AM
From: Dominican Republic, No Spin Zone
Corruption Perception Index.......the most important word is perception
Written by: juanb, 17 Nov 2009 10:25 AM
From: Dominican Republic
We live in a kleptocracy....

Kleptocracy is when many or all of the key functions of the state system – from tax collection to customs to privatization to regulation – have become so infected by corruption that legal transactions become the exception rather than the norm. The norm, which is both tolerated and expected, it that officials at every level will use their powers to extort whatever mney they can from citizens, investors, or the state itself, and citizens and investors will assume that the only way to get decisions or service is by paying someone off.

(thanks to Thomas Friedman)
Written by: VeronicaDR, 17 Nov 2009 10:40 AM
From: United States
I think we lean more toward the Kleptocracy. So much of our legal and political infrastructure is so blatently and visibily corrupt that it is expected you will be asked for bribe money. Some independent international group should do a real study on corrutpion and we would see the results. I would say we are one of the most corrupt nations on the planet.
Written by: xwill7, 17 Nov 2009 11:50 AM
From: United States, El cuarto bate
ask josean about this
Written by: gmiller261, 17 Nov 2009 12:08 PM
From: United States

bs
Written by: etiennc01, 17 Nov 2009 12:33 PM
From: United States
where is josean palin ?
the apocalypse zombie ?
the antileonelisis infected maniac ?

Written by: etiennc01, 17 Nov 2009 12:36 PM
From: United States
this article is long for him to read.
What a lazy man !
Written by: etiennc01, 17 Nov 2009 12:37 PM
From: United States
we want josean palin !
we want josean palin !
we want josean palin !
Written by: Vivacuba, 17 Nov 2009 1:18 PM
From: Dominican Republic
Pure Counter intelligence! USA is most corrupt on planet and the most dangerous because of the impact it has on the world.
Written by: josean, 17 Nov 2009 2:21 PM
From: United States, Dedicating 4 more years to fighting the Dictatorship of the Narco PLD Mafia
The only reason corruption "might" be down is because every year there is less and less to steal!

There is limit as to how much milk the Cow can produce!

¡Estos mafiosos comesolos se han robado hasta los clavos de la cruz!
Written by: baldoria23, 17 Nov 2009 2:43 PM
From: United States, Washington
Ma'Donna mia!

This is the worst kind of spin! We didn't improve, others may have gotten worse, but we didn't improve.

But alas, while we have political clientelism - where the parties can litterally buy their way into office - we will never have the political leaders who will push reform to check the arbitrary nature of allotment of resources!

Everything starts w/ the parties. We need to reform the parties and then and only then we can move forward!
Written by: clinker, 17 Nov 2009 3:13 PM
From: Dominican Republic
vc may look look like an idiot, talk like an idiot and act like an idiot, but don't let that fool you. he really is an idiot. I have a good mind to join a club and beat him over the head with it.
Written by: Ricardolito, 17 Nov 2009 3:19 PM
From: Dominican Republic, vieja Santo Domingo
IT was quite obvious that this news would not be welcomed by the writers who always wish to portray the DR in the worst possible light and it was the same people who some time ago spent days painting this organisation as credible. This will give some idea that the agenda of these writers is not based on a desire for rapid improvement in the DR but rather a desire to be able to point the finger at the current administration.
Written by: juanb, 17 Nov 2009 4:22 PM
From: Dominican Republic
We are 99th according to this study. We probably bribed someone at his organization to avoid being put where we really belong.

Clinker: Please publish the name of the club. I too would like to use it.
Written by: xwill7, 17 Nov 2009 4:48 PM
From: United States, El cuarto bate
vivacuba,
abc and castro are waiting for you
Written by: baldoria23, 17 Nov 2009 5:06 PM
From: United States, Washington
wasn't it a month ago that we were learning of all the nepotism that was going on in the congress?

I guess you can take the fact taht that came out into the light as a sign of things getting better. On the other hand, lets see to what extent nepotism is curtailed in a direct and indirect way...
Written by: okian, 17 Nov 2009 5:39 PM
From: United States
It's hard to tell when you go from so very very very very corrupt to just so very very very corrupt.
Written by: telemeco, 17 Nov 2009 7:42 PM
From: Dominican Republic, Monte Plata


so what is our SCORE again,,,, what is the ranking table?
Written by: josean, 17 Nov 2009 7:46 PM
From: United States, Dedicating 4 more years to fighting the Dictatorship of the Narco PLD Mafia
- 0
Written by: vacanos, 17 Nov 2009 8:01 PM
From: United States, An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last.
I guess this is the thread where all the whiners of DR shine.

Josie are you on turn tomorow to wash hipo's car? Let me know I got a job for you. :)

Babosa join me repel all the illegal Haitian out of our country. They are reppressing the national salary by 40%. That money you are making as NGO against our country is dirty.
Do the right thing for the land of Duarte, Sanchez, Mella, Duverge, Balaguer, ect.
Written by: josean, 17 Nov 2009 8:02 PM
From: United States, Dedicating 4 more years to fighting the Dictatorship of the Narco PLD Mafia
Who said anos can't type!
Written by: glomarexplorer, 17 Nov 2009 10:19 PM
From: United States, Fresh Water Paradise-NY Finger Lakes
I don't buy any improvements in moral fiber in DR for one minute.

Corruption is so deep in DR that it would take a paradigm shift, brought about by a revolution, and possibly several generations to reverse present trend and become a nation of integrity approaching Singapore.

If this study showed any improvements, then it could only be atributable to one of two reasons or both:

1) There is less to steal/graft due to prevailing world recession
2) The study is worthless and lacks a solid foundation and authority
Written by: Perez, 18 Nov 2009 7:48 PM
From: Dominican Republic
DR not corrupt??? Somebody is smoking heavily, and i dont mean tobacco!
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