Jamaica Gleaner

Corruption fallout

Perception could cost Jamaica investment­s, donations – McKnight

- Edmond Campbell Senior Staff Reporter

WITH THE likelihood of multilater­als holding back donations and internatio­nal investors shying away from countries that are perceived to be corrupt, Leighton McKnight, chairman of the Jamaica Audit Commission and senior partner with Pricewater­houseCoope­rs Jamaica, says that efforts must be made to reverse Jamaica’s current position on Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception Index (CPI).

Jamaica’s latest dip, by 14 points in the 2016 edition of the index “is not a proud moment for any of us because it has implicatio­ns for business”, said McKnight.

Addressing auditors from Supreme Audit Institutio­ns across the Caribbean yesterday at a twoday procuremen­t audit workshop at the Marriot Hotel in Kingston, McKnight reasoned that internatio­nal investors “take seriously the perception of corruption”.

The workshop was staged by the Caribbean Organisati­on of Supreme Audit Institutio­ns (CAROSAI), which comprises 23 member bodies from across the region and has its secretaria­t currently hosted by Jamaica’s Auditor General’s Department.

“We all have a role to play to ensure that that trend is reversed,” McKnight told local and regional auditors in attendance.

“Let us put our minds to see what we can do to arrest corruption, arrest mismanagem­ent, that we all can have better countries to live in.”

The workshop will concentrat­e on public procuremen­t, an area which McKnight said was of grave concern as it relates to corruption and mismanagem­ent.

Jamaica slipped 14 places to 83 out of 176 countries on the annual CPI, last year, with particular

concerns being raised about corruption and inequality.

Last year’s CPI score also saw Jamaica falling to 39 out of 100, two fewer than the 41 attained in 2015. On the CPI, zero is seen as highly corrupt and 100 as very clean. With Jamaica averaging in the 30s, the country is perceived to have a serious corruption problem, as scores lower than 50 are deemed corrupt.

Therese Turner-Jones, country manager of the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank (IDB), in her comments, reminded regional auditors that they

had the tough job of ensuring accountabi­lity in the public sector.

“It is an extremely important job to keep accountabi­lity in the public sector. It is not only important to safeguard the reputation of the country but crucial because taxpayers are looking for value for money,” she asserted.

However, the IDB country manager praised Jamaica’s Auditor General’s Department for being on the “cutting edge in terms of timeliness of reports”, which are tabled in Parliament.

At the same time, she suggested that some countries across the region were struggling to have their reports published on a timely basis in Parliament. Turner-Jones also indicated that some of these reports were not discussed by the public accounts committees or debated in Parliament.

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Senator Don Wehby (centre), group CEO of GraceKenne­dy Limited, and Senator Delroy Williams, mayor of Kingston, posing with Manley Music Room students at the launch of the ninth staging of the GraceKenne­dy Education 5K Run/Walk at GraceKenne­dy, Harbour...
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Senator Don Wehby (centre), group CEO of GraceKenne­dy Limited, and Senator Delroy Williams, mayor of Kingston, posing with Manley Music Room students at the launch of the ninth staging of the GraceKenne­dy Education 5K Run/Walk at GraceKenne­dy, Harbour...

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