2006 TI Progress Report on OECD Convention Enforcement
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| 2006 TI Progress Report: Enforcement of the OECD Convention on combating bribery of foreign public officials |
- Press Release: Enforcement of OECD Anti-Bribery Convention still deficient despite progress: new report (version française / versión en español)
- Introduction and overview of the 2nd TI Progress Report
- Foreign bribery prosecutions and investigations
- Actions to promote enforcement
- TI recommendations to increase enforcement
2nd OECD Progress Report: Enforcement of the OECD Convention on combating bribery of foreign public officials
Introduction
| The second TI Progress Report on OECD Convention Enforcement examines the enforcement performance of 31 of the 36 countries that have ratified the OECD Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials. The previous report was issued on 7 March 2005 and covered 24 countries. TI's progress reports are intended to provide an annual assessment of government performance. |
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Enforcement of the OECD Convention is crucially important to the fight against international corruption. Most major multinational companies have their headquarters in signatory states and effective enforcement would significantly reduce the supply side of international corruption.
The report is based on information provided by TI national experts in each country, who are highly qualified professionals selected by TI National Chapters (Appendix A lists TI experts and their qualifications.) They responded to a questionnaire (Appendix B), after consulting with government officials and other knowledgeable persons in their country. They were aided in their work by the valuable Phase I and Phase II country reports prepared by the OECD Working Group on Bribery in the course of its reviews of government compliance with the Convention. There are seven new countries covered in this report that were not included last year.
Click here to read the report.
Overview
Overall Trend
- There is now significant foreign bribery enforcement in over 1/3 of the 31 countries covered by this report, an increase to twelve countries from eight in TI’s 2005 report. However, there is as yet little or no enforcement in almost 2/3 of the countries covered.
- While the trend is positive, the success of the Convention is not assured. At present limited levels of enforcement, much of the international business community is not yet convinced that foreign bribery laws must be obeyed. Enforcement must increase substantially.
Positive Indicators
- Enforcement in the US has increased to 50 prosecutions in 2006, compared to 35 prosecutions in 2005.
- France now has eight prosecutions, compared to three in 2005. This includes several against major multinational companies,
- There is also significant enforcement in Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, Germany, Hungary, Korea, Norway, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland.
Negative Indicators
- There is little or no enforcement in five countries that play a major role in international trade. There are no prosecutions in Japan, the Netherlands and the UK. There is only one prosecution in Italy and one in Canada, the latter a minor case.
- There are ten countries with smaller shares of international trade which have no prosecutions: Argentina, Australia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Ireland, New Zealand, Portugal, Slovak Republic and Turkey.
- There are significant deficiencies in the enforcement systems of 2/3 of the countries covered.
Recommendations
- Governments must increase enforcement substantially in 2/3 of the countries covered. That will require clear demonstration of political will to prosecute foreign bribery and strengthening of enforcement systems.
- It is particularly urgent that Japan, the UK, Italy, Netherlands and Canada meet their commitments under the OECD Convention, because they play a major role in international trade.
- OECD must continue a strong follow-up monitoring programme beyond 2007, without budget reductions. With little or no enforcement in almost 2/3 of the countries covered, it is essential to build additional momentum for enforcement. This requires a strong monitoring programme. Unless this is done, there is serious danger that the Convention could fail.
Foreign bribery prosecutions and investigations (as of June 2006)
U= Information unavailable
*= Reporting for first time in 2006
**=These investigations involve allegations arising out of the UN Oil for Food programme and may not involve violations of the foreign bribery prohibition
***=Source: OECD (2005 data)
Actions to promote enforcement
A. Organization of Enforcement
B. Available Resources
C. Complaint Procedure
D. Whistleblower Protection
E. Public Awareness
F. Accounting and Auditing Requirements
G. Private Sector Efforts
H. Statutory and Other Legal Inadequacies
I. Enforcement Trends
Click here for the 2006 Report to learn more about government actions to promote enforcement.
TI recommendations to increase enforcement
A. Continue Strong OECD Monitoring
B. Publish Information about Enforcement
C. Strengthen Organization of Government Enforcement
D. Increase Awareness that Foreign Bribery is a Crime
E. Improve Access to Enforcement Systems and Reporting
F. Promote Corporate Compliance Programs
G. Improve Statutory Framework to Ensure Effective Enforcement
H. Raise Accounting and Auditing Requirements
Click here for the 2006 Report to learn more about TI's recommendations to increase enforcement.
Destinations of foreign bribery – some case examples
Foreign bribery is a serious problem in all regions. This is illustrated by the case examples listed by region below. Some of these examples were provided by TI national experts in their country reports – these are identified with a bullet point. Other examples were obtained from publicly available material including press reports and in these cases the source of the information is indicated.
Related articles
Press Releases of TI National Chapters:
- Mixed report for Australia in fighting bribery, 27 June 2006, TI Australia
TIAustralia_OECDReport.pdf 35.99 kB
- Enforcement of OECD Anti-Bribery Convention Ireland not doing enough: new report, 26 June 2006, TI Ireland
- OECD–staterna måste skärpa genomförandet av OECD-konventionen mot korruption manar Transparency International, 27 June 2006, TI Sweden
Articles:
Transparency International criticises Czechs over OECD anti-bribery convention, 28 June 2006, Prague Daily Monitor
Japan 'needs to tackle bribery', 29 June 2006, BBC News
Japan needs to be proactive in foreign bribery cases, 29 June 2006, OECD News Release
Probe into Sasol-linked unit may widen, 27 June 2006, Business Day
Group critical of some anti-corruption efforts, 26 June 2006, International Herald Tribune
Nations ‘shamed’ over bribery, 26 June 2006, Financial Times
OECD recommends Denmark to toughen sanctions for foreign bribery offences, 26 June 2006, OECD News Release
Foreign bribery: the Dutch should take a more proactive stance, says OECD, 26 June 2006, OECD News Release
Prime Minister announces crackdown on international corruption, as part of Gleneagles implementation plan, 22 June 2006, DFID Press Release
UK police 'to tackle corruption', 22 June 2006, BBC News
Fraud and white collar crime: corruption control, 21 June 2006, Legal Week
AWB tarnishes Australia: watchdog, 18 June 2006, The Australian
Anonymous US companies undermine OECD transparency drive, says STEP, 16 June 2006, Hedgeweek
SA to sign anti-bribery pact with top nations, 29 May 2006, IOL Zambia
New roundabout ways to pay bribes, 26 May 2006, Intelligence Online
Corruption: Accord won't end bribery in export deals, NGO says, 26 May 2006, IPS
The fight against dirty money, 18 May 2006, Newsday Trinidad & Tobago
27 countries now on board ADB/OECD anti-corruption fight, 17 May 2006, North Korea Times
OECD says companies must reveal record on bribery, 16 May 2006, Financial Times
Media contacts
Jesse Garcia
Gypsy Guillén Kaiser
Sarah Tyler
Tel:+49 30 34 38 20-662
Fax: +49 30 34 70 39 12
press@transparency.org
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