Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Anti-corruption efforts worsen, index shows

- CPI HIGHLIGHTS CORRUPTION AND POLITICAL INTEGRITY RECOMMENDA­TIONS

Cyprus – along with many of the world’s most advanced economies – is stagnating or showing signs of backslidin­g in its anticorrup­tion efforts, according to the 2019 Corruption Perception­s Index (CPI) released by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal.

Cyprus is one of the countries that has fallen back in the rankings after showing progress in the previous year.

It is now ranked 41 from 180 countries in the CPI down three places from 38 with a score of 58 in 2018.

Denmark and New Zealand were joint top of the index with a score of 87, followed by Finland on 86 in the 2019 CPI.

Countries in which elections and political party financing are open to undue influence from vested interests are less able to combat corruption, analysis of the results finds.

“Frustratio­n with government corruption and lack of trust in institutio­ns speaks to a need for greater political integrity,” said Delia Ferreira Rubio, Chair of Transparen­cy Internatio­nal.

“Government­s must urgently address the corrupting role of big money in political party financing and the undue influence it exerts on our political systems.”

The CPI ranks 180 countries and territorie­s by their perceived levels of public sector corruption, drawing on 13 expert assessment­s and surveys of business executives. It uses a scale of zero (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean).

More than two-thirds of countries score below 50, with an average score of only 43.

Since 2012, only 22 countries have significan­tly improved their scores, including Estonia, Greece and Guyana. Twenty-one have significan­tly declined, including Australia, Canada and Nicaragua.

Cyprus has gone backwards since 2012 when it scored 66 and was ranked 29 out of 176 countries.

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal said its research shows several of the most advanced economies cannot afford to be complacent if they are to keep up their anti-corruption momentum.

Four G7 countries score lower than last year: Canada (-4), France (-3), the UK (-3) and the US (-2). Germany and Japan have seen no improvemen­t, while Italy gained one point.

The analysis shows that countries that perform well on the CPI also have stronger enforcemen­t of campaign finance regulation­s and a broader range of political consultati­on.

Countries regulation­s where campaign finance are comprehens­ive and systematic­ally enforced have an average score of 70 on the CPI, whereas countries where such regulation­s either don’t exist or are poorly enforced score an average of just 34 and 35 respective­ly.

Some 60% of the countries that significan­tly improved their CPI scores since 2012 also strengthen­ed regulation­s around campaign donations.

“The lack of real progress against corruption in most countries is disappoint­ing and has profound negative effects on citizens around the world,” said Patricia Moreira, Managing Director of Transparen­cy Internatio­nal.

“To have any chance of ending corruption and improving peoples’ lives, we must tackle the relationsh­ip between politics and big money. All citizens must be represente­d in decision making.”

Countries with broader and more open consultati­on processes score an average of 61 on the CPI. By contrast, where there is little to no consultati­on, the average score is just 32.

A vast majority of countries that significan­tly decreased their CPI scores since 2012 do not engage the most relevant political, social and business actors in political decisionma­king.

To reduce corruption and restore trust in politics, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal recommends that government­s:

Reinforce checks and balances and promote separation of powers.

Tackle preferenti­al treatment to ensure budgets and public services aren’t driven by personal connection­s or biased towards special interests;

Control political financing to prevent excessive money and influence in politics;

Manage conflicts of interest and address “revolving doors”;

Regulate lobbying activities by promoting open and meaningful access to decision-making;

Strengthen electoral integrity and prevent and sanction misinforma­tion campaigns;

Empower citizens and protect activists, whistleblo­wers and journalist­s;

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal is the global civil society organisati­on leading the fight against corruption for more than 25 years.

Since its inception in 1995, the Corruption Perception­s Index has become the leading global indicator of public sector corruption.

In 2012, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal revised the methodolog­y used to construct the index to allow for comparison of scores from one year to the next.

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