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Transparency International releases index for the year
Chris Hamblin
27 January 2016
The index, first released in 1995, is the best known of Transparency International's publications. The least corrupt countries are at the top and the most corrupt are at the bottom. The emphasis of the annual survey is on perceptions - it is based on interviews with businessmen and others who are able to gauge corruption levels in almost all the world's countries. It draws on different assessments and business opinion surveys carried out by independent and reputable institutions. The 12 different main sources include the Political Risk Services group in New York and a survey of business executives conducted by the non-profit World Economic Forum in Geneva. The survey has come to be respected throughout the world and a staple reference-point for compliance officers and money-laundering reporting officers. The full table is to be found at http://www.transparency.org/cpi2015 The Scandinavian and Anglo-Saxon countries generally sweep the board in these surveys and the table that TI has released today is no exception. At the top are three Norse countries - Denmark (1), Finland (2) and Sweden (3), followed by New Zealand (4), Canada (9), the United Kingdom (10) and Australia (11), with the United States coming joint 16th with Austria. Iceland is 13th. Other Teutonic countries include Holland in 5th and Germany and Luxembourg joint 10th. Singapore always does well and is in 8th place. New Zealand has declined since last year - from 2nd to 4th. Finland and Sweden have each rise one point. Holland has risen from 8th last year. Australia has dropped from 11th to 13th; Brazil from 69th to 76th; Turkey from 64th to 66th. Libya, strangely for a failed state, has risen from 166th to 161st. Spain has risen from 37th to 36th although, confusingly, the TI website claims that it is deteriorating, quoting Anne Koch, TI's director for Europe and Central Asia, as saying: “While a handful of countries in Europe and Central Asia have improved, the general picture across this vast region is one of stagnation. Also very worrying is the marked deterioration in countries like Hungary, FYR of Macedonia, Spain and Turkey where we’re seeing corruption grow, while civil society space and democracy shrink. Corruption won’t be tackled until laws and regulations are put into action and civil society and the media are genuinely free.” At the bottom are Sudan (165), Afghanistan (166), North Korea (167) and finally Somalia (168). These were the bottom four last year, although they occupied slightly different places except for Somalia, which was at the very bottom then as now. This is what it means to be the subject of American sanctions, invasions and/or bombing campaigns on civilian targets. Transparency International’s other global research products include: