Global Corruption Hoax: Politicization of the Concept of Corruption and the Issues of Corruption Measurement Indices

Samiul Parvez Ahmed, G. M. Wali Ullah

Abstract


Often we observe that the third world countries always top the corruption indices compare to the developed West. This incident naturally leads to the question of why - Is it because the third world countries are significantly more corrupt than the developed countries? Or, is there any other reason behind this issue?--these are the questions that are explored in this article. To be more specific, this article critically explores contemporary arguments regarding inherent issues of corruption and various aspects of measurement techniques of corruption indices (e.g. definition issue, identification problem, clandestine nature of corruption, perceptual problem, validity and reliability of corruption data). Thus, by examining the innate complex nature of corruption, the article argue that, in many cases, in comparison to the developed West, corruption of developing nations may not be as deep as the corruption indices, which are also contested, accuse. In addition, the article emphasizes that the corruption issue is specifically targeted towards the third world countries more so than the developed countries.

Keywords: corruption, governance, corruption indices, corruption measurement


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ISSN (Paper)2222-1700 ISSN (Online)2222-2855

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