Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Shutterstock/Atstock Productions

Opinion Ireland has dropped rank on the global corruption index - we can and should do better

DCU’s John Devitt and Robert Gillanders say the country must control corruption if it is to protect more than just its international reputation.

THE 2020 EDITION of the influential Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) has been published and the news is not good for Ireland.

Ireland’s score has fallen from 74 to 72 out of 100 in the global anti-corruption index, with a score closer to 100 suggesting a country that is perceived to be relatively ‘clean’.

We are now ranked as only the ‘20th cleanest country’ in the world. This places us between Japan and the United Arab Emirates and behind most of our northern European neighbours. 

The CPI ranks 180 countries based on perceived levels of corruption and Ireland’s score is based on the findings of seven independent surveys, conducted by international think-tanks and political risk agencies.

Perceptions are used as a proxy for actual levels of corruption – it is impossible to say with certainty how corrupt a country is in objective terms, or to point to one reason why a country performs poorly on the index.

However, while our politicians might be more honest than they were in the past and our banks subject to better oversight than during the Celtic Tiger years, it would appear that we have a lot do to make up for decades of endemic corruption in politics and to repair our international reputation as a lightly regulated economy.

Should do better

While Ireland’s fall on the CPI this year is marginal, international perceptions have remained static over the past decade with Ireland’s performance lagging behind that of the UK.

This is despite relatively weak controls on political donations to British political parties and multiple allegations of corruption and cronyism in the management of the Covid-19 crisis there.

Ireland is also some way behind its Nordic neighbours and New Zealand which consistently feature near the top of the index and which are reputed for taking a zero-tolerance approach to misconduct in public office.

These perceptions matter for a number of reasons. Numerous studies tell us that countries that are perceived to be corrupt attract significantly less foreign direct investment. Multinationals, like domestic investors, are wary of putting their money into countries with unpredictable additional costs and risks.

Moreover, governance indexes such as the CPI are used by credit ratings agencies such as Standard and Poor’s to help assess risk and determine the cost of debt on international markets.

Transparency matters

Public perceptions of corruption also fuel populism by destroying trust and once in power, populists are more likely to wallow in the swamp than drain it.

This corrosive impact of corruption on trust and legitimacy is extremely costly for society. Recent work from the DCU Anti-Corruption Research Centre and Illinois State University tells us that compliance with Covid-19 lockdown orders in the US was weaker in states that are more corrupt.

Earning a reputation for clean government is important politically, economically and socially. The question then is what can we do? 

To earn a reputation for high standards in public office we must take the steps necessary to deter, detect, punish and learn from corruption in Irish public life. 

Previous Irish governments have made some progress towards that goal. New anti-corruption legislation introduced in 2018 should make it easier to prosecute companies as well as officials.

More recently, the publication of the Hamilton Review made some welcome recommendations aimed at tackling economic crime.

Nonetheless, if Ireland is to change the way international observers see it, it needs to continue the wider programme of government reform that began in 1997, with the Freedom of Information Act and which was revived for a period from 2011 to 2015 with the Protected Disclosures Act and Regulation of Lobbying Act. 

Since then, some promised reforms have yet to be realised. For example, the Public Sector Standards Bill was delayed for four years and then unceremoniously scrapped in 2020.

Similarly, long delays in establishing new judicial appointments and ethics regimes have led to criticism from the Council of Europe and United Nations

Glaring loopholes identified by the Standards in Public Office Commission that allow officeholders to break the Regulation of Lobbying Act without any consequences have yet to be closed.

Draconian defamation laws that deter journalists from exposing low standards in high office have yet to be reformed.

Legal reforms will not be enough on their own, of course. While an independent anti-corruption bureau would be preferable to the multi-agency approach to investigations currently being pursued, existing bodies such as the Garda Economic Crime Bureau and its Ant-Corruption Unit are poorly resourced and need to be equipped and empowered to investigate allegations of political corruption.  

Political support for open government initiatives and the fight against corruption has also been found wanting. Ireland missed its last deadline to draft its Open Government Partnership National Action Plan and runs the risk of being expelled from the global initiative launched by Barrack Obama in 2011.

Lack of political will

It should be noted too that this is generally a cross-party problem. At the last two general elections, very few parties or candidates campaigned for greater transparency and accountability in public life.

This, it would appear, is a result of complacency and misplaced confidence that the days of the Galway Tent and brown envelope are completely behind us. 

Much like a virus, corruption is like a disease that adapts to measures aimed at controlling it and often spreads unnoticed through the body of its victim. To treat it, we need to know where it is and what form it has taken. We also need to be able to identify the symptoms that often go unnoticed and causes that go unaddressed. 

One such symptom is the prevailing attitudes to conduct in public office. Worryingly, the EU’s Eurobarometer public survey on corruption has shown a fall in the share of Irish respondents expressing the view that it is never acceptable to exchange money, a gift, or favour to get something from the public service.

The Eurobarometer of businesses in 2019 also found that 60 percent of Irish respondents believed that corruption was affecting business competition in Ireland and a similar number believed that nothing would be done by the authorities if corruption was detected.

In addition to the need for greater transparency and reform, these trends suggest that public outreach and education also need to be part of a national anticorruption strategy.

One of the most sobering findings in social science, as with its medical counterpart, is that it is usually much easier for a society to succumb to corruption than it is to cure it.

With this in mind, we should take recent trends in Ireland’s anticorruption norms and gaps in our anti-corruption defences very seriously indeed.

Our global reputation is not the only issue at stake. Corruption is an insidious force that entrenches poverty, inequality, distrust in democracy, and disproportionately harms the most vulnerable in society. We therefore owe it to ourselves and our children, to be alert to the risk of corruption as much as any virus.

John Devitt is founder and Chief Executive of Transparency International Ireland and Chairperson of the Whistleblowing International Network

Robert Gillanders is an Associate Professor of Economics at Dublin City University Business School and Co-Director and Co-Founder of the DCU Anti-Corruption Research Centre (DCU ARC). He has published numerous academic articles on the causes and consequences of corruption.

VOICES LOGO

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.

Close
63 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Peter Gavin
    Favourite Peter Gavin
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 2:11 PM

    Amazing list of accomplishments for someone who is only 42

    75
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Robin Pickering
    Favourite Robin Pickering
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 4:13 PM

    And to think, if her parents had stayed in Ireland, she could have risen through the ranks of the ICA to become a Branch Secretary or even the lady that does the roster for cleaning the church.

    72
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Michael
    Favourite Michael
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 1:47 PM

    Congrats to her.

    Will she condemn the US actions in the Middle East as terrorism?

    46
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Petr Tarasov
    Favourite Petr Tarasov
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 2:00 PM

    Nope. She’s a cheerleader. She wouldn’t be where she is if she’d gone around telling the truth!

    49
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Michael
    Favourite Michael
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 2:05 PM

    Sounds like a lot of this administration. Divide the country more and blame the republicans.

    As a famous man once said, “Bush is gone”.

    21
    See 1 more reply ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Danny Murray
    Favourite Danny Murray
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 2:13 PM

    she called Hillary a monster :-) good appointment imo

    20
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Aran Fitzpatrick
    Favourite Aran Fitzpatrick
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 1:52 PM

    This is the same woman that wrote a book entitled “A problem from hell”. The premise of the book was that the U.S. didn’t intervene enough in another countries affairs.

    40
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Petr Tarasov
    Favourite Petr Tarasov
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 1:59 PM

    Correct. She is a major proponent of ‘humanitarian intervention’ – a vile euphemism.

    45
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Peter Gavin
    Favourite Peter Gavin
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 2:09 PM

    Yeah like those terrible times when they intervened in Somalia to try and protect the food supply to millions of starving people or when they went into Bosnia and kosovo to stop ethnic cleansing. How dare they!

    137
    See 15 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute phunkyboy
    Favourite phunkyboy
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 2:12 PM

    You obviously haven’t watch the film ‘The whistleblower ‘ starring Rachel Weisz . True story .

    10
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Petr Tarasov
    Favourite Petr Tarasov
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 2:24 PM

    Peter — Can I interest you in a second-hand car?

    16
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Peter Gavin
    Favourite Peter Gavin
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 2:39 PM

    Oh you’re hilarious Petr. Why don’t you entertain us with stories of the fantastic human rights record of your heros in Russia, China and North Korea then?

    195
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Bob MacBob
    Favourite Bob MacBob
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 3:37 PM

    Anyone who actually read the book couldn’t but agree that the delays in intervention documented in the book were mistakes.

    9
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Petr Tarasov
    Favourite Petr Tarasov
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 4:02 PM

    But if you’d also read other books and used your own head you might arrive at your own independent conclusion.

    14
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Aoife
    Favourite Aoife
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 4:46 PM

    @ Peter: Somalia was a long, long way from an attempt to “protect the food supply to millions of starving people”. They didn’t even arrive at the right time or place to prevent the famine – the US (technically the UN, but the US were the largest contingent) went to Mogadishu, while the famine was close to the Kenyan border. (It was also mostly over by the time they arrived.) Instead, they ended up being drawn into the Somali civil war and, at one point, bombed a meeting of Somalis and killed 50 of them in an attempt to kill a Somali warlord. It was a utter debacle, and a terrible example to use if you’re trying to discuss the benefits of humanitarian intervention.

    10
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Petr Tarasov
    Favourite Petr Tarasov
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 5:14 PM

    If the ruling classes of powerful states started acting altruistically to ‘save’ people here and there it would be the first time this has ever happened in human history.

    Powerful states and other powerful entities tend to behave in a way that protects their own narrow interests. Morality and humanitarianism have literally no place in a discussion of international relations. Those who, against all evidence, believe otherwise or at best deeply naive.

    6
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute steve white
    Favourite steve white
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 6:00 PM

    maybe the US ad other countries UK, France etc had aleady intervened and that was parrt of progrma

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute steve white
    Favourite steve white
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 6:01 PM

    problem^ sorry for typos

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Jim Flavin
    Favourite Jim Flavin
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 6:06 PM

    @Peter Gavin
    the fact that other countries have a sbad o worse Human rights than USA is no argument to be joyous about the Human Rights in US – which are being removed with Patriot Act and NDAA – and increasing survelliance of the population .
    As for interventions – the US record of interventions is disastrous both by themselves and by proxy from Vietnam , to Chile , Chagos Island , Phillipines , Iraq , Afgahistan . Its a long list – like all imperialists they leave behind death and destruction .
    IF USA is so great – why dont they stay at home – they dont as they need to rob other countries to maintain their declining [ for the majotity ] standard of living .
    taken from John pilgers site – latest article
    ”The “mess” left by George Bush and Tony Blair in Iraq is a sectarian war, the bombs of 7/7 and now a man waving a bloody meat cleaver in Woolwich. Bush has retreated back into his Mickey Mouse “presidential library and museum” and Tony Blair into his jackdaw travels and his money.

    Their “mess” is a crime of epic proportions, wrote Von Sponeck, referring to the Iraqi Ministry of Social Affairs’ estimate of 4.5 million children who have lost both parents
    full article
    http://johnpilger.com/articles/from-iraq-a-tragic-reminder

    5
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Conor O'Riordan
    Favourite Conor O'Riordan
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 6:23 PM

    I love the assumption that if you oppose the US’s foreign policies you must be an ardent supporter of Russia, China, North Korea etc. Can’t I hate everyone?

    15
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Peter Gavin
    Favourite Peter Gavin
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 6:41 PM

    @aoife but the food aid was being delivered into the port of mogadishu and then intercepted by aidid and other warlords so that’s where the un forces needed to be
    @ Jim I’m not trying to portray the US as some paragon of virtue and I disagree with some of their actions certainly but they are dammed if they do and dammed if they don’t. Anytime they intervene somewhere they are condemned as imperialists but if they don’t then they are condemned as aloof and uncaring usually with jibes that there is no oil so they don’t care. Well there was no oil in Somalia or Bosnia or kosovo but they acted while Europe wrang it’s hands and did nothing. I remember the horror here when we saw the killing begin in kosovo but there were no protests against the Serbs. However the second The US started to bomb Belgrade there were demos from the usual left wing in Ireland against the Americans despite the fact that they were trying to stop the sort of ethnic cleansing seen in Bosnia. I just hate the knee jerk anti Americanism that is so common here despite them being a good friend to this country and all the ties of blood and culture

    9
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Petr Tarasov
    Favourite Petr Tarasov
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 6:55 PM

    I love the assumption that if you oppose the US’s foreign policies you must be an ardent supporter of Russia, China, North Korea etc.

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Jim Flavin
    Favourite Jim Flavin
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 9:25 PM

    ” They are condemned as being aloof ”.
    Now that is one word I have never heard about US . They go in guns blazing – unlike the Chinese – who do business .
    as for kosovo – again I refer to John Pilger – one of the few real investigative journalists left on Planet Earth http://www.labournet.net/balkans/9911/pilger.html
    the fact that there is no oil – well its not always about Oil – but Power and control
    What the heck did they do in Indonesia – the great eperiment in New World Order .

    Why did they bomb Laos – the most bombed country on Planet Earth .one could give many examples of US inetrference .- Why do they train death squds – to do their killing in other coutries eg Honduras
    the whole thing is sickening .They are a Terrorist nation with a Terrorist Foreign Policy – and this woman is now part of it – hardly something to be proud of .

    6
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute hsianloon
    Favourite hsianloon
    Report
    Jun 6th 2013, 11:29 AM

    Having it her way theyd probably have nuked the entire planet. But then they’d run out of people to terrorize.

    Mistake thinking a government can’t be a terrorist. Pity the British didn’t wipe the Americans out centuries ago….

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Brian Leddin
    Favourite Brian Leddin
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 1:54 PM

    She wrote a great biography of Sergio Vieira de Mello, the UN diplomat who was killed in Iraq just after the invasion in 2003. Not sure if her support for the intervention in Libya is something to boast about though. Time will tell.

    35
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Diotavelli Smeesh
    Favourite Diotavelli Smeesh
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 3:10 PM

    Her article about the Clinton Administration’s lack of reaciton to Rwanda genocide, published in The Atlantic, is very good. http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2001/09/bystanders-to-genocide/304571/

    14
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute vusi
    Favourite vusi
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 5:17 PM

    Obama have Irish roots so he taking care of his Irish families , love it

    4
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a commentcancel

 
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds