Business World

Most big exporters failing to check foreign bribery — Transparen­cy Internatio­nal

-

FRANKFURT AM MAIN — Countries that strictly enforce a worldwide pact against foreign bribery are far outnumbere­d and outweighed by those that turn a blind eye, a report published Wednesday by watchdog Transparen­cy Internatio­nal (TI) found.

TI charged that 22 countries accounting for 39.6% of global exports practise “little or no enforcemen­t” of the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t’s (OECD) 1997 Anti-Bribery Convention, which requires signatorie­s to criminaliz­e bribery of foreign public officials.

The list of slackers includes non-signatorie­s like China and India, but also members of the pact like Mexico, Japan or Finland.

That compares to just seven countries, weighing in at 27% of global exports — the United States, Germany, the UK, Italy, Switzerlan­d, Norway and Israel — classed as “active” enforcers of the agreement, the highest rating.

Since TI’s last report in 2015, eight countries improved their level of enforcemen­t, with Israel shooting from the lowest to the highest bracket as it successful­ly concluded its first-ever foreign bribery case and opened a slew of new ones.

But four countries also slid back in the classifica­tion, while China — rated for the first time — entered at the lowest level.

“The convention’s fundamenta­l goal of creating a corruption-free level playing field is still far from being achieved, due to insufficie­nt enforcemen­t,” the authors wrote.

As the world’s doughtiest exporter at 10.8% of the global total, they singled out China as a country with “special responsibi­lity.”

“China’s performanc­e regarding internatio­nal anti-corruption standards influences attitudes and behavior in other major exporting countries,” the authors wrote. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines