Challenging Corruption in Asia : Case Studies and a Framework for Action

At the economic level, corruption is seen as a contributing factor to the East Asian financial crisis. The crisis focused people's attention on the staggering impact of corruption, particularly in Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, and Thailand...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bhargava, Vinay, Bolongaita, Emil
Format: Publication
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2013
Subjects:
CPI
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/11/2853362/challenging-corruption-asia-case-studies-framework-action
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15069
id okr-10986-15069
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTABILITY
AGGREGATE INDICATORS
ANTI- CORRUPTION
ANTI-CORRUPTION
ANTICORRUPTION
ANTICORRUPTION AGENDAS
ANTICORRUPTION EFFORTS
ANTICORRUPTION ISSUES
ANTICORRUPTION MEASURES
ANTICORRUPTION POLICIES
ANTICORRUPTION STRATEGIES
ANTICORRUPTION STRATEGY
BRIBE PAYERS
BRIBE PAYERS INDEX
BRIBERY
BRIBERY OF FOREIGN PUBLIC OFFICIALS
BRIBES
BUSINESS OPERATIONS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CITIZEN
CITIZENS
CIVIL SOCIETY
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS
CLEAN WATER
COALITIONS
COMBATING BRIBERY
CONTROLLING CORRUPTION
CORRUPT PRACTICES
CORRUPTION
CORRUPTION CHARGES
CORRUPTION CONTROL
CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS
CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX
CORRUPTION PROBLEMS
CPI
DECISION- MAKING
DEMOCRACY
DEMOCRATIZATION
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
EXECUTION
FEEDBACK MECHANISMS
FIGHTING CORRUPTION
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FISCAL
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNANCE ENVIRONMENT
GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
GOVERNANCE PROBLEM
GOVERNANCE QUALITY
GOVERNANCE REFORM
GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
GRAFT
HUMAN RIGHTS
INCOME
INCOME GROWTH
INCOME INEQUALITY
INDEPENDENT COMMISSION AGAINST CORRUPTION
INEQUALITY
INFANT MORTALITY
INSTITUTIONAL PERFORMANCE
INTEGRITY
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
INVESTMENT RATES
JUDICIAL SYSTEMS
JUDICIARY
JUSTICE
LACK OF TRANSPARENCY
LAWS
LEARNING
LEGAL INSTITUTIONS
LEGITIMACY
MEDIA
MEMBER STATES
MINISTERS
MONEY LAUNDERING
MULTILATERAL INSTITUTIONS
NATIONS
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
PARLIAMENT
PER CAPITA INCOME
PERCEPTIONS INDEX
POLITICAL LEADERS
POLITICAL RISK
POLITICAL STABILITY
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRIME MINISTER
PROGRAMS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REFORM
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PUBLIC POLICY
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SECTOR CORRUPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR GOVERNANCE
PUBLIC SERVICE
REPRESENTATIVES
RULE OF LAW
SOCIAL CONDITIONS
SYSTEMIC CORRUPTION
TRANSPARENCY
VETO CORRUPTION IN GOVERNMENT
FINANCIAL CRISIS
PUBLIC AWARENESS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT & GOVERNMENT POLICY
GLOBALIZATION
GOVERNANCE APPROACH
LEADERSHIP ATTITUDE
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTABILITY
MONITORING & EVALUATION APPROACH
FEEDBACK MECHANISMS
ANTICORRUPTION ISSUES
spellingShingle ACCOUNTABILITY
AGGREGATE INDICATORS
ANTI- CORRUPTION
ANTI-CORRUPTION
ANTICORRUPTION
ANTICORRUPTION AGENDAS
ANTICORRUPTION EFFORTS
ANTICORRUPTION ISSUES
ANTICORRUPTION MEASURES
ANTICORRUPTION POLICIES
ANTICORRUPTION STRATEGIES
ANTICORRUPTION STRATEGY
BRIBE PAYERS
BRIBE PAYERS INDEX
BRIBERY
BRIBERY OF FOREIGN PUBLIC OFFICIALS
BRIBES
BUSINESS OPERATIONS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CITIZEN
CITIZENS
CIVIL SOCIETY
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS
CLEAN WATER
COALITIONS
COMBATING BRIBERY
CONTROLLING CORRUPTION
CORRUPT PRACTICES
CORRUPTION
CORRUPTION CHARGES
CORRUPTION CONTROL
CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS
CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX
CORRUPTION PROBLEMS
CPI
DECISION- MAKING
DEMOCRACY
DEMOCRATIZATION
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
EXECUTION
FEEDBACK MECHANISMS
FIGHTING CORRUPTION
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FISCAL
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNANCE ENVIRONMENT
GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
GOVERNANCE PROBLEM
GOVERNANCE QUALITY
GOVERNANCE REFORM
GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
GRAFT
HUMAN RIGHTS
INCOME
INCOME GROWTH
INCOME INEQUALITY
INDEPENDENT COMMISSION AGAINST CORRUPTION
INEQUALITY
INFANT MORTALITY
INSTITUTIONAL PERFORMANCE
INTEGRITY
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
INVESTMENT RATES
JUDICIAL SYSTEMS
JUDICIARY
JUSTICE
LACK OF TRANSPARENCY
LAWS
LEARNING
LEGAL INSTITUTIONS
LEGITIMACY
MEDIA
MEMBER STATES
MINISTERS
MONEY LAUNDERING
MULTILATERAL INSTITUTIONS
NATIONS
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
PARLIAMENT
PER CAPITA INCOME
PERCEPTIONS INDEX
POLITICAL LEADERS
POLITICAL RISK
POLITICAL STABILITY
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRIME MINISTER
PROGRAMS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REFORM
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PUBLIC POLICY
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SECTOR CORRUPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR GOVERNANCE
PUBLIC SERVICE
REPRESENTATIVES
RULE OF LAW
SOCIAL CONDITIONS
SYSTEMIC CORRUPTION
TRANSPARENCY
VETO CORRUPTION IN GOVERNMENT
FINANCIAL CRISIS
PUBLIC AWARENESS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT & GOVERNMENT POLICY
GLOBALIZATION
GOVERNANCE APPROACH
LEADERSHIP ATTITUDE
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTABILITY
MONITORING & EVALUATION APPROACH
FEEDBACK MECHANISMS
ANTICORRUPTION ISSUES
Bhargava, Vinay
Bolongaita, Emil
Challenging Corruption in Asia : Case Studies and a Framework for Action
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
South Asia
Asia
relation Directions in Development;
description At the economic level, corruption is seen as a contributing factor to the East Asian financial crisis. The crisis focused people's attention on the staggering impact of corruption, particularly in Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, and Thailand. The interlocking relationship of business and government were previously viewed as part of the way of doing business and practicing politics-a useful partnership crucial to strategic policymaking. As one scholar noted, "Not too many years ago, the economic successes of the countries of East Asia were attributed by some observers to a presumably positive impact of corruption in facilitating decisionmaking". Many actors justified questionable practices by explaining them to be necessary conditions for rapid economic development. Today those specific practices constitute the problematic areas of corruption. At the political level, corruption has risen in recent years in national agendas because of its role in political developments. At one point the heads of government themselves of Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand were in the dock on corruption-related charges. Peaceful populist protest forced the Philippine president, Joseph Estrada, to step down in January 2001. In July 2001 Indonesia's parliament removed President Abdurrahman Wahid from office partly because of corruption allegations. Thaksin Shinawatra, prime minister of Thailand, was indicted by the National Counter-Corruption Commission but was eventually acquitted in a controversial decision by the country's Constitutional Court. In 2002 the convictions of two sons of President Kim Dae-Jung of the Republic of Korea on corruption charges tarnished the president's achievements. Other high-level political leaders have also been convicted recently on corruption-related charges in China, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand.
format Publications & Research :: Publication
author Bhargava, Vinay
Bolongaita, Emil
author_facet Bhargava, Vinay
Bolongaita, Emil
author_sort Bhargava, Vinay
title Challenging Corruption in Asia : Case Studies and a Framework for Action
title_short Challenging Corruption in Asia : Case Studies and a Framework for Action
title_full Challenging Corruption in Asia : Case Studies and a Framework for Action
title_fullStr Challenging Corruption in Asia : Case Studies and a Framework for Action
title_full_unstemmed Challenging Corruption in Asia : Case Studies and a Framework for Action
title_sort challenging corruption in asia : case studies and a framework for action
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/11/2853362/challenging-corruption-asia-case-studies-framework-action
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15069
_version_ 1764425511223689216
spelling okr-10986-150692021-04-23T14:03:12Z Challenging Corruption in Asia : Case Studies and a Framework for Action Bhargava, Vinay Bolongaita, Emil ACCOUNTABILITY AGGREGATE INDICATORS ANTI- CORRUPTION ANTI-CORRUPTION ANTICORRUPTION ANTICORRUPTION AGENDAS ANTICORRUPTION EFFORTS ANTICORRUPTION ISSUES ANTICORRUPTION MEASURES ANTICORRUPTION POLICIES ANTICORRUPTION STRATEGIES ANTICORRUPTION STRATEGY BRIBE PAYERS BRIBE PAYERS INDEX BRIBERY BRIBERY OF FOREIGN PUBLIC OFFICIALS BRIBES BUSINESS OPERATIONS CAPACITY BUILDING CITIZEN CITIZENS CIVIL SOCIETY CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS CLEAN WATER COALITIONS COMBATING BRIBERY CONTROLLING CORRUPTION CORRUPT PRACTICES CORRUPTION CORRUPTION CHARGES CORRUPTION CONTROL CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX CORRUPTION PROBLEMS CPI DECISION- MAKING DEMOCRACY DEMOCRATIZATION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH EXECUTION FEEDBACK MECHANISMS FIGHTING CORRUPTION FINANCIAL CRISIS FISCAL GOOD GOVERNANCE GOVERNANCE ENVIRONMENT GOVERNANCE INDICATORS GOVERNANCE PROBLEM GOVERNANCE QUALITY GOVERNANCE REFORM GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS GRAFT HUMAN RIGHTS INCOME INCOME GROWTH INCOME INEQUALITY INDEPENDENT COMMISSION AGAINST CORRUPTION INEQUALITY INFANT MORTALITY INSTITUTIONAL PERFORMANCE INTEGRITY INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS INVESTMENT RATES JUDICIAL SYSTEMS JUDICIARY JUSTICE LACK OF TRANSPARENCY LAWS LEARNING LEGAL INSTITUTIONS LEGITIMACY MEDIA MEMBER STATES MINISTERS MONEY LAUNDERING MULTILATERAL INSTITUTIONS NATIONS NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS PARLIAMENT PER CAPITA INCOME PERCEPTIONS INDEX POLITICAL LEADERS POLITICAL RISK POLITICAL STABILITY POVERTY REDUCTION PRIME MINISTER PROGRAMS PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REFORM PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS PUBLIC OFFICIALS PUBLIC POLICY PUBLIC PROCUREMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR CORRUPTION PUBLIC SECTOR GOVERNANCE PUBLIC SERVICE REPRESENTATIVES RULE OF LAW SOCIAL CONDITIONS SYSTEMIC CORRUPTION TRANSPARENCY VETO CORRUPTION IN GOVERNMENT FINANCIAL CRISIS PUBLIC AWARENESS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT & GOVERNMENT POLICY GLOBALIZATION GOVERNANCE APPROACH LEADERSHIP ATTITUDE MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTABILITY MONITORING & EVALUATION APPROACH FEEDBACK MECHANISMS ANTICORRUPTION ISSUES At the economic level, corruption is seen as a contributing factor to the East Asian financial crisis. The crisis focused people's attention on the staggering impact of corruption, particularly in Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, and Thailand. The interlocking relationship of business and government were previously viewed as part of the way of doing business and practicing politics-a useful partnership crucial to strategic policymaking. As one scholar noted, "Not too many years ago, the economic successes of the countries of East Asia were attributed by some observers to a presumably positive impact of corruption in facilitating decisionmaking". Many actors justified questionable practices by explaining them to be necessary conditions for rapid economic development. Today those specific practices constitute the problematic areas of corruption. At the political level, corruption has risen in recent years in national agendas because of its role in political developments. At one point the heads of government themselves of Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand were in the dock on corruption-related charges. Peaceful populist protest forced the Philippine president, Joseph Estrada, to step down in January 2001. In July 2001 Indonesia's parliament removed President Abdurrahman Wahid from office partly because of corruption allegations. Thaksin Shinawatra, prime minister of Thailand, was indicted by the National Counter-Corruption Commission but was eventually acquitted in a controversial decision by the country's Constitutional Court. In 2002 the convictions of two sons of President Kim Dae-Jung of the Republic of Korea on corruption charges tarnished the president's achievements. Other high-level political leaders have also been convicted recently on corruption-related charges in China, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand. 2013-08-14T18:56:05Z 2013-08-14T18:56:05Z 2004 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/11/2853362/challenging-corruption-asia-case-studies-framework-action 0-8213-5683-6 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15069 English en_US Directions in Development; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research :: Publication East Asia and Pacific South Asia Asia