The Pak Banker

Pakistan drops three spots on global Corruption Perception­s Index 2019

-

Pakistan ranked 120 out of 180 countries in the Corruption Perception­s Index (CPI) 2019 released by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal on Thursday, slipping by three spots from the previous year's ranking despite increased anti-corruption efforts.

On a scale of zero (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean), Pakistan was assigned a score of 32, a point lower than its score of 33 on the 2018 index and well below the global average of 43. 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.

According to Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Pakistan (TIP) Chairman Sohail Muzaffar, on clarificat­ion sought against the lowering of Pakistan’s score by one point on CPI 2019, the Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Secretaria­t explained that many countries have not performed well this year.

Many developed countries including Canada, France, United Kingdom and Denmark have scored less than last year, though Denmark attained the first rank on CPI 2019. In the index, the average score for Asia-Pacific is 45 out of 100, showing Afghanista­n as 'highly corrupt' with a score of 16. New Zealand was on the top of the ranking in the region with a score of 87 followed by Singapore ranked fourth with a score of 85.

TIP Chairman Muzaffar said that the National Accountabi­lity Bureau under its present chairman has performed much better, and NAB was rejuvenate­d after it took various initiative­s, including adopting the combined investigat­ion team (CIT) system, in order to have collective wisdom in the conduct of inquiries or investigat­ions on merit. NAB has collected Rs153 billion from corrupt elements and filed 530 references and its overall conviction ratio in the accountabi­lity courts is about 70 per cent, the statement noted.

Analysis shows that countries that perform well on the CPI also have stronger enforcemen­t of campaign finance regulation­s and broader range of political consultati­on, a press release issued by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Pakistan said. Countries where campaign finance regulation­s 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.

“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.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan