Washington, December 13, 2012
Despite Malaysia's high-profile anti-corruption crusade, half of
the corporate executives surveyed by a global corruption watchdog
believe that competitors have obtained business in the country through
bribery.
Transparency International said Malaysia scored worst in the 2012 Bribe Payers Survey.
Transparency International said Malaysia scored worst in the 2012 Bribe Payers Survey.
It asked nearly 3,000 executives from 30 countries whether they had
lost a contract in the past year because competitors paid a bribe, and
in Malaysia, 50% of them said 'yes'.
Second on the dubious honor roll was Mexico, which was at 48%.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Japan was ranked as the world's
least-corrupt place to do business, with just 2% of respondents saying
they had lost out due to bribery.
Malaysia's neighbour Singapore was second-cleanest, which was at 9%.
Even Indonesia, with a long-standing reputation for corruption, fared better than more-developed Malaysia.
By comparison, 27% of respondents in China said they thought bribes had cost them business, the report said.
"It shows the attitude of private companies in Malaysia, indicating
that bribery in the public sector could be systemic and in a sense
institutionalized," Paul Low, president of the Malaysian chapter of
Transparency International, said.
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