{"id":104984,"date":"2021-04-02T19:20:43","date_gmt":"2021-04-02T19:20:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/asiapacificreport.nz\/?p=56545"},"modified":"2021-04-02T19:20:43","modified_gmt":"2021-04-02T19:20:43","slug":"nz-part-of-worldwide-corruption-surveys-whitewash","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/04\/02\/nz-part-of-worldwide-corruption-surveys-whitewash\/","title":{"rendered":"NZ part of worldwide corruption surveys whitewash?"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Jason Brown in Auckland <\/em><\/p>\n Worldwide anti-corruption rankings \u2013 or first world whitewash?<\/p>\n Long-standing questions about the fairness of corruption ratings and rankings from Transparency International surveys now have answers.<\/p>\n From the Pacific, at least.<\/p>\n For example, why was New Zealand dropped from TI\u2019s Global Corruption Barometer (GCB)<\/a>?<\/p>\n \u201cI do know about this because we tried to get NZ included,\u201d says Transparency International New Zealand chair Julie Haggie.<\/p>\n \u201cUnfortunately it is a funding issue.\u201d<\/p>\n This lack of funding means supposedly more corrupt “developing” countries are scrutinised more closely than allegedly cleaner “developed” countries, fuelling criticisms of bias against developing and poor countries.<\/p>\n GCB surveys the public<\/strong> So how did the gap between the two surveys come about?<\/p>\n \u201cFunding for the GCB Pacific came out of aid funding from Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (Australia) and Ministry for Foreign Affairs and Trade (New Zealand) under the Pacific reset and Pacific Stepup programmes,\u201d said Haggie.<\/p>\n \u201cTheir funding specifically excludes activities in donor giving countries that are not directed out to the Pacific.\u201d<\/p>\n However, New Zealand did feature \u2013 once \u2013 in the barometer survey.<\/p>\n That 2013 survey found that 3 percent of those responding reported incidents of bribery \u2013 some 30 people directly, or around 80,000 people if taken as a representative sample of the wider New Zealand population.<\/p>\n Those experiences are all but ignored across government websites there, with GCB survey results mentioned only once.<\/p>\n Responses from Berlin<\/strong> Islands Business<\/em> sent questions to the press section at the global headquarters of the Berlin-based organisation in early February, but got no reply.<\/p>\n Asked for help with getting a response from Berlin, Haggie replied that:<\/p>\n \u201cAs I understand it this was not a TI decision.<\/p>\n \u201cThey did have a limited pool of funding which may have determined how many small Pacific nations they could include. Australia was not included in this set as well, I think they were previously included in an Asian GCB which NZ was not included in.\u201d<\/p>\n Haggie is correct \u2013 Australia has disappeared from the barometer as well.<\/p>\n In 2017, however, Australia reported a bribery rate of 4 percent, or just short of a million people if those surveyed are representative of the general population.<\/p>\n Lacks funding for survey<\/strong> \u201cWe are undertaking research this year which will look at the connection between money laundering and corruption across the Pacific,\u201d said Haggie.<\/p>\n While this will no doubt be welcomed by island-based anti-corruption campaigners, criticism of the fairness of Transparency International surveys go well beyond Australia and New Zealand.<\/p>\n Global concerns go back years, focused around developed countries ignoring their own backyard.<\/p>\n Similar concerns were already long standing enough for the inventor of the index to withdraw from future surveys over a decade ago.<\/p>\n “In 1995, I invented the Corruption Perceptions Index,\u201d wrote Passau University professor Graf Lambsdorff in a 2009 email to the TI network, \u201cand have orchestrated it ever since, putting TI on the spotlight of international attention.<\/p>\n \u201cIn August 2009, I informed Cobus de Swardt, managing director of TI, that I am no longer available for doing the Corruption Perceptions Index.”<\/p>\n Gaps in the Pacific<\/strong> \u201cWhen New Zealand was last included in the GCB in 2013, it was undertaken as part of a global rather than a regional report, and TI had access to other sources of funding covering corruption measurement tools globally,\u201d Mathew said.<\/p>\n \u201cIf future opportunities arise to survey New Zealand (and Australia) for the GCB, we would be very interested to do so, as of course it does leave gaps in our understanding of people\u2019s lived experience of corruption around the world and in the region.\u201c<\/p>\n Ironically, Transparency International itself has referred to concerns about a whitewash by first world countries in other spheres.<\/p>\n Quoting an Oxfam report in May last year, titled \u201cBlacklist or whitewash?\u201d, TI noted the example of the European Union, which leaves its own countries off lists of tax havens.<\/p>\n Jason Brown<\/a> is founder of Journalism Agenda 2025 and writes about Pacific and world journalism and ethically globalised Fourth Estate issues. This article was originally published in Islands Business<\/a> news magazine and is republished with permission.\n
\nUnlike Transparency International\u2019s much better-known Corruption Perceptions Index, the GCB surveys members of the public about actual experiences of corruption, not just \u201cperceptions\u201d from \u201cexperts\u201d and \u201cbusiness leaders\u201d.<\/p>\n
\nSo why was New Zealand dropped from the barometer?<\/p>\n
\nAt the same time Transparency International claims it lacks funding to survey actual corruption in Australia and New Zealand, both countries are instead funding research that focuses attention on corruption \u2013 in the Pacific.<\/p>\n
\nBack in 2021, Transparency International\u2019s Pacific regional perspective Miriam Mathew agrees there are gaps.<\/p>\n
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