Combating corruption
Published on
Tuesday, December 02, 2014
by
Study:
Corporate Bribery and Corruption Grease the Gears of Global Capitalism
The Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development reports that large multinational corporations, led
by top managers, are behind majority of documented bribery cases
by
Though substantial,
report authors say that the documented cases of corporate bribery are only
"the tip of the iceberg." (Photo: Tax Credits/flickr/cc)
Large multinational
corporations are behind the majority of documented bribes worldwide, with most
payers and takers hailing from rich nations, according to a study released Tuesday by the 34-nation
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
The report, which
evaluated data obtained from 427 bribery offense cases spanning the past 15
years, found that 57 percent of all bribes examined involved corporate efforts
to obtain public contracts—mostly in western, more developed states. Customs
and defense officials accounted for a significant proportion of bribe
recipients, at 11% and 6% respectively.
According to the
study, the average bribe amounts to 10.9% of the total value of the
transaction, with the average payout calculated at nearly $14 million for the
cases reviewed.
Regarding the impact
such bribery is having on business and governance, the report states: "The
true social cost of corruption cannot be measured by the amount of bribes paid
or even the amount of state property stolen. Rather, it is the loss of output
due to the misallocation of resources, distortions of incentives and other
inefficiencies caused by corruption that represent its real cost to
society."
When it comes to
corporate bribes, the analysis found that these instances are generally not
committed by lone low-ranking individuals. According to the report, 53 percent
of known bribery cases directly involved high-level corporate managers or CEOs.
“Most international bribes are paid by large companies, usually with the
knowledge of senior management,” the study states.
Almost two-thirds of
bribery cases occurred in just four sectors, the report revealed. The highest
proportion of bribes occur in the extractive industries—such as fossil fuels
and other mining activities— and account for 19 percent of all bribery cases.
This was followed by the construction, transportation and storage, and information
and communication sectors.
However, the report
states that, due to the complex and secretive nature of global corruption, its
findings are just "the tip of the iceberg."
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