institute of economic affairs

30 July 2010

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France tops developed world corruption league

France tops developed world corruption league

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France is the most corrupt country in the developed world, according to a new study published by the Institute of Economic Affairs.

The study of corruption in the developed world by economist Ian Senior awards Olympic-style medals for corruption at different levels of government and society, so that corruption by Presidents and Prime Ministers results in a gold medal and corruption by lesser politicians and officials leads to the award of silver or bronze medals.

According to this method, at the head of the medal table France receives four gold medals, Japan three gold medals and Italy two.

The UK lies in fourteenth place, with no gold or silver medals, but three bronze.

The study also shows that corruption has significant negative economic and social consequences. It is not the case that corruption helps to lubricate the wheels of trade, as has sometimes been claimed. Rather, corruption makes society poorer by misdirecting resources to the already wealthy and powerful and making goods and services more expensive than they would otherwise be.

According to Senior: ‘Corruption is a cancer. Cancer destroy individual bodies, corruption destroys institutions and societies. The elimination of corruption is an important step to making the world more prosperous and more democratic.’

Notes to editors

The IEA is a registered educational charity and independent of all political parties. It accepts no corporate funds linked to research areas and allows no corporate donor to exceed more than 2% of annual income.

*Corruption - The World's Big C, by Ian Senior, IEA Research Monograph 61.

Contacts

Ian Senior, Tel: 07971 543657

Professor Philip Booth, IEA Editorial and Programme Director, Tel: 020 7799 8912

Dr Richard Wellings, IEA Deputy Editorial Director, Tel: 020 7799 8919

Institute of Economic Affairs, 2 Lord North Street, Westminster, London, SW1P 3LB | tel: 020 7799 8900 | fax: 020 7799 2137 | email: iea@iea.org.uk

Registered In England 755502, Charity No CC/235 351, Limited by Guarantee

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