Type | Journal Article - ISS Monograph |
Title | Counting the covert: using data to understand corruption in South Africa |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 189 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | |
URL | https://www.issafrica.org/uploads/Mono189V2.pdf |
Abstract | Can we quantify corruption or authoritatively comment on trends in corruption in South Africa? How should we assess quantitative data emerging from criminal justice agencies or other investigative bodies, anti-corruption hotlines, or corruption surveys? How is this data meaningful and helpful in understanding the nature and extent of corruption in South Africa? In recent years concern about corruption has increased in South Africa. But although it is widely discussed there is often a lack of specificity when it is discussed. To address this problem a greater degree of precision is needed when corruption is reported on or analysed. For instance, greater clarity is needed on the precise meaning of the various forms of corruption. Is bribery different from procurement corruption or nepotism in the employment domain? When developing strategies to address corruption, should we assume that corrupt actions generally involve two discrete parties? Does corruption inevitably involve role-players from the private sector? Related to this, is it meaningful to talk about private sector corruption? What should be made of surveys that claim to quantify overall levels of bribery or levels of exposure to corruption by people accessing services from government departments? Should data from surveys be regarded as a reliable guide to overall levels of corruption? This monograph aims to engage with questions such as these. In the first part it provides examples of reports on corruption by government and civil society organisations. These illustrate that different agencies consistently apply different approaches to classifying forms of corruption, while reports providing quantitative data consistently fail to explain the approach they have used to differentiate forms of corruption from one another. In addition, anomalies are often present in the labelling of forms of corruption, resulting in the data provided in these reports becoming confusing. A preliminary objective of this monograph is to provide a more clearly articulated system for labelling and differentiating the key visible manifestations of corruption in South Africa. The assumption is that a more clearly defined system of classifying acts of corruption will support greater analytical clarity in comparing these acts. Defining corruption as ‘the abuse of public position for private gain’, the second part of the monograph attempts to provide such a system to categorise manifestations of public sector corruption. Five primary categories and 14 associated subcategories are defined. The following five forms of corruption and their subcategories are then described and discussed: Executive summary2 Counting the covert: using data to understand corruption in South Africa • Procurement corruption • Other bribery and extortion • Misappropriation, embezzlement, fraud or theft • Nepotism in appointments and promotions • Other mismanagement or abuse of state resources (sometimes corrupt) |
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