Perfil (Sabado)

Argentina retains low score in global graft ranking

Annual Corruption Perception­s Index posted by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal.

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Argentina maintained the same transparen­cy score of 38 out of 100 in the Corruption Perception­s Index between 2021 and 2022, ranking 94th out of 180 countries in the annual report by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal (TI).

Since 1995, TI’S annual Corruption Perception­s Index has ranked 180 countries and territorie­s on a scale from zero (very corrupt) to 100 (very clean) using data from sources such as the World Bank and private consulting firms. According to the organisati­on, the index released on Tuesday “shows that most countries are failing to stop corruption.”

With a transparen­cy score of 38, Argentina joins a group of countries including Brazil, Ethiopia, Morocco and Tanzania with the same moderately low score. While Argentina received a sub-50 rating, some of its neighbours scored much higher, with Uruguay achieving 74 and Chile 67.

Across Latin America, TI showed high levels of corruption and highlighte­d the absence of measures to combat it. The organisati­on warned in its report these levels of corruption help the spread of criminal networks and exacerbate violence in a region with already high homicide rates,

A visual testament to this, the interactiv­e map on TI’S website assigns a colour to each country placed according to their position in the ranking; In Latin America, the map is almost completely red, with the exception of Chile and Uruguay.

The rest of the Latin American countries have scores below 50, including Cuba (45), Colombia (39), Argentina (38), Brazil (38), Ecuador (36), Guatemala (24), Peru (36), El Salvador (33), Dominican Republic (33), Bolivia and Mexico (31) and Paraguay (28).

Venezuela (14), Haiti (17), Nicaragua (19) and Honduras (23) have the worst scores in Latin America, where the lines between public institutio­ns and criminal networks have blurred, TI notes. The index for the latter three has dropped significan­tly since 2017.

The lack of progress in the fight against corruption “has led in the region to a weakening of democratic institutio­ns, an increase in violence and an advance of organised crime in public institutio­ns,” Luciana Torchuaro, TI’S regional adviser for Latin America, told the AFP news agency in an interview.

“Fragile government­s are failing to curb criminal networks, social conflict and violence,” Delia Ferreira Rubio, the organisati­on’s president, said in a statement.

Denmark (90), Finland (87) and New Zealand (87) repeat their high scores as the least corrupt nations in the world, while Somalia (12), Syria (13) and South Sudan (12) have the highest corruption perception indices.

Among the steepest decliners was Qatar, which faced European bribery allegation­s and complaints about poor working conditions as hosts of the 2022 FIFA World Cup. It dropped nine spots to 40th place.

Notably, Britain dropped seven places to rank 18th, with scandals ranging from lobbying to ministeria­l misconduct “highlighti­ng woeful inadequaci­es in the country’s political integrity systems,” the Berlin-based watchdog said.

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