#for more foreign politics tune in at 9 PM same channel this is all from inky news
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nooo its good when people talk about what they like, mine was a curiosity because i didn’t read in the right way your tags! and thank you for the reply 👍🏽
You’re welcome anon🦑
#I always talk in tags assuming that nobody reads them except for prev lol#I didn’t think I’d be explaining italian internal discrimination on this blog today lol#for more foreign politics tune in at 9 PM same channel this is all from inky news#asks
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We connect the dots among politics, places, and people. Support Foreign Policy by becoming a subscriber today: Unlimited access to articles Four FP email newsletters Digital access to FP’s print edition VIEW SUBSCRIPTION OFFERS Not ready to subscribe? Sign up to enjoy three free articles, on the house. news analysis features the magazine channels REGISTER/SIGN IN TRY FOR $1 A WEEK THE CABLE Bribery Is on the Rise Worldwide, and It Costs A Lot More Than Just Money But it could be on the downswing from here, experts say. BY ROBBIE GRAMER | DECEMBER 1, 2016, 12:33 PM Corruption, graft, and palm-greasing are a real and growing drag on the global economy — and they open the door to a host of evils like drug smuggling and human trafficking. Bribes to the tune of about $1.5 trillion change hands every year, according to the International Monetary Fund, or about 5 percent of global GDP. And the true cost of corruption doesn’t just boil down to money, either. “You can’t have narco-trafficking without bribery, human trafficking without bribery, or even terrorism without bribery,” said Alexandra Wrage, president and founder of the anti-bribery organization TRACE International. TRACE says that bribery is getting worse, with global graft on the rise, according to a new study. Some 60 percent of countries have an increased bribery risk compared with the 2014 study, while only 32 percent have a decreased bribery risk, the group says. While anti-bribery laws and enforcement are on the upswing in many countries, government transparency and capacity for civil society oversight of anti-bribery are not. The study shows the cleanest — and most graft-prone — countries around the world, ranking countries on a scale of 1 to 100, with higher numbers indicating higher bribery risks. See how each country stacks up here: Sweden comes out on top with a score of 10, followed by New Zealand at 15 and Estonia at 17. The most bribery-prone country in the world is Nigeria, with a score of 99. Russia is actually getting cleaner, TRACE says, improving from a score of 65 two years ago to 58 today. China, despite a huge anti-corruption drive in Beijing, sits immobile with a score of 66. Even the United States even saw a slight increase in bribery risk, going from a score of 27 in 2014 to a score of 34 in 2016, though it’s still a lot closer to Sweden than Swaziland. The United States improved anti-bribery laws, according to the study, but saw its score rise because of increased business-to-government interactions and a slight backslide in civil society oversight of bribery. “Generally, more places have gotten worse than have gotten better,” Virna Di Palma, senior director of global strategy with TRACE, told Foreign Policy. In particular, the Americas, Africa, and East Asia are backsliding on fighting corruption, Di Palma said. Corruption hemorrhages public trust in governments. A Transparency International study released in November found, after surveying 60,000 Europeans and Central Asians, 53 percent thought their governments handled corruption poorly, while only 23 percent thought they were doing well. One in three surveyed thought their government’s officials and lawmakers were mostly corrupt. Even in the supposedly cleaner and more advanced West, public ire at corruption — whether real or perceived — helps fuel populist political movements. All is not necessarily lost, though, says Wrage. Corporate behavior is getting more legal scrutiny around the world. And if bribery scores are high now, it may be because bribery was simply more difficult to track in the past. “It’s not that there’s more bribery, it’s that it’s more visible,” Wrage said. Companies are also learning that dirty business can be bad business, says Di Palma. Additionally, small and medium-sized companies — not just multinationals — are beginning to take anti-graft measures more seriously. “We see the world trending in the right direction,” Di Palma said. “Initially companies were only interested because of increased anti-bribery enforcement, but in the last few years we’ve seen a change,” she said, adding that “companies are recognizing that bribery is a bad business strategy.” Photo credit: DIPTENDU DUTTA/AFP/Getty Images; TRACE International, Inc. Robbie Gramer is a diplomacy and national security reporter at Foreign Policy. Twitter: @RobbieGramer VIEW COMMENTS TAGS: CORRUPTION, FOREIGN BRIBERY, GLOBAL CIVIL SOCIETY, GLOBAL GOVERNANCE, THE CABLE A DECADE OF GLOBAL THINKERS THE PAST YEAR'S 100 MOST INFLUENTIAL THINKERS AND DOERS READ NOW TRENDING NOW SPONSORED LINKS BY TABOOLA BY TABOOLA MORE FROM FOREIGN POLICY BY TABOOLA latest From Doughnut Girls to Den Mothers and Cheerleaders MARCH 9, 2019, 11:25 PM Donald Trump Is Watching Sebastian Kurz MARCH 9, 2019, 7:00 AM Our Best Weekend Reads MARCH 9, 2019, 7:00 AM Argentines’ Impossible Choice MARCH 8, 2019, 3:56 PM Before Resigning, Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson Irked Trump MARCH 8, 2019, 1:16 PM SEE ALL STORIES TRENDING 1 U.S. Cancels Journalist’s Award Over Her Criticism of Trump 33036 SHARES 2 All the Legal Trouble in Trumpworld 2144 SHARES 3 Donald Trump Is Watching Sebastian Kurz 149 SHARES 4 Argentines’ Impossible Choice 68 SHARES 5 The World's Many Measles Conspiracies Are All the Same 1212 SHARES voices 400 American Troops Can’t Do Anything STEVEN A. COOK The World’s Many Measles Conspiracies Are All the Same LAURIE GARRETT The Tragedy of Trump’s Foreign Policy STEPHEN M. WALT By using this website, you agree to our use of cookies. This use includes personalization of content and ads, and traffic analytics. Review our Privacy Policy for more information. ABOUT FP MEET THE STAFF REPRINT PERMISSIONS ADVERTISE/EVENTS WRITER’S GUIDELINES PRESS ROOM WORK AT FP SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES FP GUIDES – GRADUATE EDUCATION ACADEMIC PROGRAM – FP PREMIUM FP ARCHIVE BUY BACK ISSUES PRIVACY POLICY CONTACT US POWERED BY WORDPRESS.COM VIP © 2019, THE SLATE GROUP
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