The spectre of corruption

Similar documents
Prime Minister Madam Minister Ambassador Rapacki Excellencies Ladies and Gentlemen:

Corruption: Costs and Mitigation Strategies

DEFINING AND MEASURING CORRUPTION AND ITS IMPACT

Corruption and sustainable development

Executive summary 2013:2

Boris Divjak Director of U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre (Bergen, Norway) Transparency International School on Integrity, Vilnius 07 July 2015

Good Governance for Medicines

International Trade Union Confederation Statement to UNCTAD XIII

CORRUPTION & POVERTY IN NIGERIA

BBB3633 Malaysian Economics

DEFINING ECONOMIC FREEDOM

What is corruption? Corruption is the abuse of power for private gain (TI).

From Inherit Challenges facing the Arab State to the Arab Uprising: The Governance Deficit vs. Development

The water services crisis is essentially a crisis of governance

Governance, Corruption, and Public Finance: An Overview

Address by Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa at the NEDLAC Labour School, Roodevallei Conference Centre, Pretoria

KEYNOTE SPEECHES Keynote speeches.p /16/01, 10:33 AM

Influence of Corruption over Economic Growth in Macedonia

Oxfam Education

The Role of the African Development Bank in Assisting Member States to Cope with the Global Financial Crisis

ENHANCING DOMESTIC RESOURCES MOBILIZATION THROUGH FISCAL POLICY

9.1 Human Development Index Development improving the material conditions diffusion of knowledge and technology Measure by HDI

The Emerging Powerhouse: Opportunities, Trends & Risks of the African Economic Climate

Governance Challenges for Inclusive Growth in Bangladesh

Following are the introductory remarks on the occasion by Khadija Haq, President MHHDC. POVERTY IN SOUTH ASIA: CHALLENGES AND RESPONSES

Anti-Corruption, Governance and Procurement

World Bank s Country Partnership Framework

>r ""~ L1i'B'E RALS and EUROPEAN LIBERALS ARE THE FIRST TO ADOPT ELECTION MANIFESTO

VENEZUELA: Oil, Inflation and Prospects for Long-Term Growth

Testimony to the United States Senate Budget Committee Hearing on Opportunity, Mobility, and Inequality in Today's Economy April 1, 2014

The first eleven years of Finland's EU-membership

Pakistan s Economy: Opportunities and Challenges I have been asked to speak today on the subject of Opportunities and Challenges for Pakistan s

Adam Smith and Government Intervention in the Economy Sima Siami-Namini Graduate Research Assistant and Ph.D. Student Texas Tech University

CRS Report: Welfare Spending The Largest Item In The Federal Budget

Miracle of Estonia Entrepreneurship and Competitiveness Policy in Estonia

BUSINESS & PEACE 2018

Rule of Law: Economic Prosperity Requires the Rule of Law By J. Kenneth Blackwell

International Anti-Corruption Champion: What is the strategy?

Inclusive growth and development founded on decent work for all

Income Inequality and Social, Economic, and Political Instability. Joseph Stiglitz Dubai: World Government Summit February 13, 2017

GLOBALIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT

C. THE FIGHT AGAINST CORRUPTION IN THE ECONOMY

GHANA: Experience with Partnerships between Government and CSOs. Dr. Tony Aidoo

BALKAN BAROMETER Infographics. pocket edition. This project is funded by the European Union

ASEAN Economic Community (AEC): Can ASEAN learn from the EU?

Sources of information on corruption in Ethiopia

State Program on Fighting Corruption (Years )

A Summary of the U.S. House of Representatives Fiscal Year 2013 Budget Resolution

Quiz # 12 Chapter 17 The Public Policy Process

POLI 12D: International Relations Sections 1, 6

Review* * Received: July 25, 2008

Good governance and economic development: The GPA as an enabling instrument

The abuse of entrusted power by public officials in their

ACP-EU JOINT PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY

EBA Investment Attractiveness Index. Investors' moods in the 2nd half of 2017

ETUC Platform on the Future of Europe

Section 1: Microeconomics. 1.1 Competitive Markets: Demand and Supply. IB Econ Syllabus Outline. Markets Ø The Nature of Markets

2017 SADC People s Summit Regional Debates and Public Speaking Gala. Strengthening Youth Participation in Policy Dialogue Processes

Weekly Geopolitical Report

1. 60 Years of European Integration a success for Crafts and SMEs MAISON DE L'ECONOMIE EUROPEENNE - RUE JACQUES DE LALAINGSTRAAT 4 - B-1040 BRUXELLES

WHAT DOES THE EUROPEAN UNION S (EU S) NEW APPROACH BRING TO BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA (B&H)?

Role of Cooperatives in Poverty Reduction. Shankar Sharma National Cooperatives Workshop January 5, 2017

Retrospective of the Last Ten Years in Caucasus and Central Asia Countries 1. John Odling-Smee 2

Concluding Remarks by the President of ECOSOC

Does Corruption Effects on Social Sector in SAARC Region?

Rewriting the Rules of the Market Economy to Achieve Shared Prosperity. Joseph E. Stiglitz New York June 2016

RECENT MULTILATERAL MEASURES TO COMBAT CORRUPTION. Cecil Hunt *

THE LIMA DECLARATION AGAINST CORRUPTION

Meeting of the MENA-OECD Initiative on Governance and Competitiveness for Development. Excellences, Distinguished Delegates, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Globalization and its Impact on Poverty in Pakistan. Sohail J. Malik Ph.D. Islamabad May 10, 2006

ECONOMIC FREEDOM: POLICIES FOR LASTING PROGRESS AND PROSPERITY

Heritage of the Czech Capital

ZAMBIA NATIONAL GOVERNANCE BASELINE SURVEY REPORT

The State, the Market, And Development. Joseph E. Stiglitz World Institute for Development Economics Research September 2015

CORRUPTION AND POVERTY IN BANGLADESH: A SOCIO ECONOMIC STUDY

THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HYDROCARBON REVENUE CYCLING IN TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO

10 th AFRICAN UNION GENDER PRE-SUMMIT

Corruption and Shadow Economies: Some New Results

Summary of key points

GLOBALIZATION A GLOBALIZED AFRICAN S PERSPECTIVE J. Kofi Bucknor Kofi Bucknor & Associates Accra, Ghana

Session 10: Neoliberalism as Globalization, Part II. (Anti) Free Trade and (De)Globalization

Executive summary. Transparency International

ETUC contribution in view of the elaboration of a roadmap to be discussed during the June 2013 European Council

Countries at the Crossroads 2012 Methodology Questions

(COM(97)0192 C4-0273/97)

Dr. Veaceslav Ionita Chairman Moldovan Parliament s Committee for Economy, Budget, and Finance. Article at a glance

Contemporary Human Geography, 2e. Chapter 9. Development. Lectures. Karl Byrand, University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan Pearson Education, Inc.

Volume 30, Issue 1. Corruption and financial sector performance: A cross-country analysis

GGCRISI. Issue list 1 2 to the codebook for Discursive Actor Attribution Analysis

HOW ECONOMIES GROW AND DEVELOP Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.)

Unoficial translation BASIC GUIDELINES NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR CORRUPTION PREVENTION AND COMBATING

The Economic Impact of Violence on the World Economy

Financing Sustainable Development

Political Economy of. Post-Communism

Social institutions, social policy and redistributive poverty reduction

NEW TUNISIA NEW OPPORTUNITIES

Want Less Poverty in the World? Empower Women *

2015 Global Forum on Migration and Development 1

Kenya. Strategy for Sweden s development cooperation with MFA

Chapter 8 Government Institution And Economic Growth

Transcription:

The spectre of corruption Every year the Nedbank & Old Mutual Budget Speech Competition invites economics students to submit essays on urgent topical issues. The winners are announced on the evening of the day of the Budget Speech. This year undergraduates addressed the economic and fiscal costs of corruption. In this summarised essay, finalist Schalk Bothma from the University of Stellenbosch unpacks the repercussions of rampant corruption. Very few issues provoke public discourse to the same extent as the problem of corruption. The rise of populist politicians promising to break the cycle of corruption, during various 2016 elections, show that people worldwide are growing increasingly unhappy with the way corruption is allowed to prosper. The massive discontent with rampant corruption is completely justified. According to Corruption Watch, it has far reaching effects on a country and its people and is central to many other issues a nation experiences. A commonly accepted definition states that corruption is the abuse of entrusted power for private gain. This definition is used by various public institutions and civil society organisations, including the World Bank and Transparency International. Although corruption is mostly transactional in nature (i.e. bribery), it often manifests as more than simply a shady business transaction between two entities. Powerful business elites collude with politicians to control stateowned enterprises, capture political institutions, and turn tender processes and procurement into monopolies. Economic Costs of Corruption Lower Rates of Economic Growth

Corrupt behaviour leads to suboptimal economic performance wherever it occurs. Corruption impedes economic performance by stifling drivers of inclusive growth. It weakens the state s capacity to perform core functions, ultimately undermining inclusive economic growth. The World Bank states it has corruption as the single greatest obstacle to economic and social development". Indirect Economic Costs By diverting resources away from collective purposes to private ones, corruption is more damaging than the mere decline in the annual GDP growth rate. Inefficient Public Investment Corruption lowers the quality of public investment and increases its cost. Fraudulent procurement processes lead to artificial inflation of project cost, undermining efforts to reduce infrastructure gaps and boost growth. Ultimately it is the general public that bears the brunt of these inefficiencies, since the infrastructure financed is suboptimal or even completely dysfunctional. Reduced Private and Foreign Direct Investment Aside from reducing the effectivity of public investment, corruption also leads to a large reduction in private investment. High levels of corruption in a country decrease confidence and lead to higher perceived risk, which makes both foreign and local investors wary and deters them from investing. IMF research points out that an increase of 1 point in the corruption index can lead to a reduction in foreign investment by as much as 8%.

The April downgrades of South Africa s foreign currency debt to subinvestment grade sent investors fleeing from equities into the higher-yielding bond market. These downgrades followed a controversial decision by President Jacob Zuma to fire Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan, in a cabinet reshuffle deemed by many to be the product of cronyism. Foreign direct investment is a key determinant of long-term growth. Reduced investment caused by corruption, therefore, imposes a significant cost on any country s economy. Reduced Entrepreneurial Innovation Corruption hurts innovative activities. Research indicates that innovators looking to enter established markets are more reliant on certain governmentsupplied goods, such as licences and permits, than established producers. These goods become primary targets of corruption. Higher Rates of Inflation Research shows that more corrupt countries experience higher rates of inflation. This is due to many factors, but the government s increased dependence on seigniorage (profit made by a government by printing money) has been cited as the main cause. Since tax evasion will clearly be higher in corrupt countries, government revenue will decline. The state, therefore, has a motive for creating inflation - to generate seigniorage. Increased Income Inequality People in poverty are hurt disproportionately by corruption, making them the primary victims of corruption. Bureaucrats divert funds intended for economic

development, undermining the state s ability to provide basic services to citizens, feeding injustice and increasing inequality. Fiscal Costs of Corruption Losses due to Corruption Annually, a staggering $1.5 trillion is lost due to corruption worldwide, according to the IMF. This amounts to roughly 1.8-2% of global GDP. Our Parliamentary Monitoring Group estimates the size of the corruption phenomenon in South Africa is about R25 billion annually.

Change in Composition of Public Expenditure Corrupt bureaucrats tend to support components of government spending where bribes can more efficiently be levied and collected. Research shows that these components involve projects which are complex in nature, involve large sums of money and are not common or recurring. Large sums of money can more easily be defrauded in this fashion by inflating the cost of the project. To fund projects like these, state funds are diverted away from projects in sectors such as health and education. Lower Tax Revenue Widespread corruption promotes a culture of non-compliance with taxation laws, thereby increasing tax evasion, according to the IMF. Change in public debt and higher financing cost Due to tax revenue falling short and increased spending, government borrowing is increased. The higher the corruption in a country, the higher is the ratio of sovereign debt to GDP. Since corruption slows economic growth and performance, it is clear that the more corrupt the government, the less likely it would seem to be able to pay off its debts in the future. This means that the debt (state bonds) it issues has a higher risk for the lender and must therefore offer a higher premium, further increasing the public debt. Increased debt and its higher cost of financing place a massive burden on a country s fiscal structure. In conclusion, the pervasiveness of the costs of corruption and its widespread consequences are clear. It is also evident that those in poverty are hit the

hardest by the corruption pandemic. This creates a vicious cycle that can only be halted by uprooting corruption in its totality.