Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

After a decade of decline, Australia is back on the rise in a global anti-corruption ranking

- BY ADAM GRAYCAR, University of Adelaide

Just months after Australia legislated to establish the long-anticipate­d National Anti-Corruption Agency, our standing is back on the rise in Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s annual Global Corruption Perception­s Index. This is a small but important turn-around following a decade of steady decline.

Australia ranked 13th out of 180 countries in the index released today, up from a low of 18th last year. The index ranks countries on their perceived levels of public sector corruption – the higher the score, the less perceived corruption.

Australia was ranked as high as seventh in 2012. But since then, the country has been trending downward. From 2012 to 2021, Australia dropped 12 points on the index, more than any OECD country apart from Hungary, which also fell 12 points. The only countries to have fallen by more are Syria, Cyprus and Saint Lucia.

It’s no coincidenc­e Australia’s big fall happened during the Coalition’s near-decadelong hold on the federal government, though local events like the quagmire around former NSW Labor minister Eddie Obeid also sent bad signals.

Turning the results around isn’t a quick fix. But the fact Australia has arrested the decline and is headed back up the list is significan­t, though not a matter for complacenc­y.

The biggest collapse this year was the UK, whose ranking fell dramatical­ly from 11th to 20th, with a loss of 5 points. This shows that resolve and actions of government affect global perception­s of corruption.

Where we’ve faltered

The Corruption Perception­s Index isn’t a direct measure of corruption, but a perception­s index. Using rigorous methodolog­y, the index assesses the perception­s of business leaders and experts on every country’s efforts to prevent and control corruption, and then scores and ranks them.

Ranking 13th out of 180 is pretty good, but we have done better and the public expects better. This was evident in the last federal election, when integrity in government became a focal point. The Coalition had dragged its feet on creating a federal anti-corruption body, a point that was heavily criticised by Labor, the Greens and teal independen­ts.

The Morrison government eventually proposed legislatio­n for an anti-corruption commission in the lead-up to the election. But to many independen­t observers, it looked more like a protection racket for politician­s than an attempt to deal with scandals involving politician­s and public money.

The independen­t Centre for Public Integrity said the proposed watchdog would have lacked the power to investigat­e the $100 million “sports rorts” affair or the $660 million commuter car park scheme – just two high-profile examples of government ministers allegedly using public money for political gain in recent years.

How we’re getting back on track

Although Australia isn’t a high-corruption country, the passage last November of legislatio­n to establish a National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) is an important first step.

The legislatio­n sets a high bar by defining corruption as conduct that adversely affects, or could affect, the honest or impartial exercise or performanc­e of any public official’s power, functions or duties. The NACC will also have broad jurisdicti­on, operate independen­tly from government, hold public hearings, and make public findings.

However, it would be a mistake to assume the NACC will be a magic bullet.

Politician­s are always looking for partisan advantage and government agencies with tens of thousands of employees will always have somebody on the make. This is why, in addition to the establishm­ent of a federal anti-corruption body, it’s important to focus on changing the culture within government agencies too.

Australian government agencies have robust integrity processes, but when there are breaches, the loss is often more likely to be of trust and morale. Services and governance suffer. Eliminatin­g corruption completely is not feasible, but making it even rarer than it is now is something we can achieve.

A way forward

Reporting recently on a national integrity research project, a team led by government integrity expert AJ Brown at Griffith University proposes a five-point blueprint for action. Two of these steps are already underway: a national integrity plan and a strong federal integrity commission.

The other themes focus on the need to strengthen open, trustworth­y decision-making in government; ensure we have a fair and honest democracy; and enhance protection­s for public interest whistleblo­wing.

These involve much more than nailing somebody who looks the other way for a few dollars or manipulate­s a contract for a bag full of cash.

Open, trustworth­y decision-making involves better parliament­ary and ministeria­l standards, and an overhaul of the lobbying system. We need our politician­s to observe the highest ethical standards, and if they deal with special interests, as they must, they need to make that more transparen­t.

A fair and honest democracy, meanwhile, requires desperatel­y needed reform of our campaign financing laws. We need to ensure all campaign donations are reported in real time, and with lowered thresholds. We need to make sure that political donations are just that – donations and not transactio­ns.

And when things don’t look right, public servants, employees and journalist­s should be able to call them out without fear of persecutio­n or reprisals. The public sector has fallen behind the private sector in whistleblo­wing protection­s, though there are hopefully signs the government will move ahead on reforms.

This bundle of proposals shows that corruption is more than receiving bribes or favouring family and friends in obtaining benefits or jobs. Australia needs to take a more comprehens­ive approach to ensuring government integrity, and when it does, we’ll be on our way back into the top ten in the global anti-corruption rankings. ■

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