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Americans' Perception of Corruption
By Ben Tanosborn
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 2, 2010
To most knowledgeable Americans, when you mention CPI, the
first thing that comes to their minds is the “consumer price index,”
something they associate with inflation and the way it might affect their
personal lives as consumers. I would be surprised if even one
percent among this educated group ever heard of Transparency International
and its annually published Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI). The
fact that Transparency International is headquartered in Berlin, or that
“its output” may not be flattering to their national pride, never helped
matters; during TI’s 15-years existence, neither the American corporate
press, nor public officials, nor politicians in this nation have
considered discussing corruption as a national civic issue, preferring
that it be relegated to individual cases, rare “rotten apple” situations;
and that did little to change the overall perception of an American
virtuous society. In the past, corruption to Americans, at least
in a societal way, was something that existed mostly beyond their borders
– in Africa, Latin America and other parts of the world. Americans
preferred to think of themselves as number 1 when it came to being
“corruption-proof” in the public sector. So finding themselves
ranked number 22 by TI has come as a shock, just as other rankings have
been in the last few years – in life expectancy, education, broadband
internet access and all areas of citizens’ welfare – vis-à-vis the two
dozen or so nations that comprise the so-called developed world.
To Americans’ frustration, often irrationally-challenged by a
vociferous “patriotic” segment of the population unwilling to accept
reality; they are starting to realize that they may be closer to the tail
end among the developed countries than they are to number 1. Even in
something as primordial to America’s future as “global innovation-based
competitiveness,” where by all counts they should be number 1, given
America’s wealth and intellectual resources, they are ranked number 6, and
losing ground fast! But let’s get back to the Corruption
Perceptions Index. Criticism of the methodology used in the
computation of the index, and its subjectivity, is well founded; and I,
trained and experienced in the workings of operations research, will add
my voice to much of that criticism. However, reasonableness tells me
that although much of the information has graduated from public opinion
surveys to the sole discretion of “experts,” the label in the index
itself, perceptions, should allow sufficient wiggle room to an
unprejudiced effort that uses a preponderance of inexact sciences.
At last, what has been happening in the past few years in the US – from
Enron, to the discovery of many Ponzi schemes (Bernie Madoff’s at the top
of the list), to a self-monitored fraudulent financial system which almost
destroyed the economy (we are not out of the woods yet), to a political
system at the beck and call of lobbyists representing for the most part
the corporate elite, to last January’s decision by the Supreme Court to
allow unlimited spending on political campaigns – is finally getting
to a new and more strict interpretation of ethics in both private and
public sectors by much of the American population – at least those people
who do not benefit from corruption. This index tries to measure
“the degree to which corruption is perceived to exist among public
officials and politicians,” while Transparency International defines
corruption as “the abuse of entrusted power for private gain.”
Getting a 7.1 score from a range of 0 to 10 is certainly nothing to be
proud of for a nation that somehow keeps insisting to have the formula for
working democracy, and militarily tries to implement a nation-building
program in parts of the world. And that brings us to the irony in
the situation: of the 180 nations rated in the CPI… would we ever guess
that Iraq ranks 176th and Afghanistan 179th? Yes, America’s
embryo-democratic protégées where the US is clearly nation-building and
conducting unending wars of choice! Americans are starting to come
to terms with what corruption is all about, and how naive they have been
in thinking that their “exceptionalism” would keep corruption at bay, at
least domestically. If Americans could only reach a little further
and define corruption beyond domestic and into international terms… as
”the abuse of hegemonic power for elitist corporate gain,” their
understanding of peace and war would not need to be filtered through the
Pentagon; and their foreign relations would certainly take a much
different course. America’s last five-star general and
first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Omar N. Bradley said back in
1948… “Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.”
Nothing much has changed since then… except for America’s wish to be the
dominant giant while still remaining an ethical infant. Ben
Tanosborn www.tanosborn.com
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