Compliance
More OECD States Turn Screws On Corruption, But Monitoring Is Uneven – Study

The Paris-based group has noted how member countries are moving to fight bribery and corruption, but notes that while there's progress, monitoring of such efforts isn't consistent.
Major industrialized countries have stepped up strategies for
stamping out corruption, but fewer than half of them (40 per
cent) monitor whether planned measures are put to work, according
to the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development.
Since 2020, many OECD member countries have developed an
anti-corruption or integrity strategy for the first time, such as
Costa Rica, Finland, France, Switzerland, and the US, and 71 per
cent of them have a strategy in place, the report said. Data
provided is taken from 38 nations.
But there are shortcomings: 76 per cent of countries do not track
what jobs senior office holders take upon leaving public office,
potentially exposing them to conflicts of interest. Similarly,
there is a lack of data on the implementation of internal
auditors' recommendations, Paris-headquartered OECD said.
Bribery and corruption remain significant compliance challenges
around the world. The OECD Anti-Bribery Convention, adopted in
1997, requires each signatory country to make foreign bribery a
crime. The 44 signatory countries are responsible for about
two-thirds of world exports and almost 75 per cent of total
foreign direct investment outflows (source: Transparency
International).
The OECD released the findings last week from its Anti-Corruption
and Integrity Outlook, drawing data from OECD Public Integrity
Indicators.
“OECD countries have been bolstering their anti-corruption and
integrity frameworks, with regulations becoming increasingly
comprehensive and sophisticated. However, countries must also
improve their ability to monitor the effectiveness of policies
and processes in mitigating corruption risks and upholding
integrity,” the report said.
The report said it finds implementation gaps. Notably, while
regulations on conflict of interest are robust, meeting 76 per
cent of OECD standard criteria, their practical implementation
lags, with an average of only 40 per cent of OECD criteria on
practices being met.
Source: OECD Anti-Corruption and Integrity
Outlook
In late January, Transparency
International, a group publishing content about bribery,
corruption and enforcement of laws about these issues, issued its
Corruption Perceptions Index, showing that only 28 of the 180
countries measured by this index have improved their
anti-corruption levels over the last 12 years, and 34 countries
have significantly worsened.
“Despite progress made across the planet in criminalizing
corruption and establishing specialized institutions to address
it, corruption levels remain stagnant globally,” it
said.
Earlier in March, the OECD warned Luxembourg that “very weak
enforcement” of rules to stamp out bribery “remains a matter of
concern.” The group did say, however, that the European Union
jurisdiction has made “significant” legislative and institutional
reforms.