Tag Archives: Transparency International

Under the Table: Transparency International Report ‘Reveals Endemic Global Corruption!’

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The World is Not Enough: The Real Meaning of the Brazilian Protests

Screen Shot 2013-06-22 at 13.54.32The current mass protests across Brazil have confounded both domestic politicians and international observers alike. The largest nation in Latin America by both population and area has been a poster-child for all that is good about the twenty-first century, with the country regularly cited as a model emerging market possessing a glittering future. Yet the state which put the ‘B’ into ‘BRICS’ is presently in the international spotlight for demonstrations which have seen 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup placards being violently displaced, booming metropolises being disfigured by tear gas and rubber bullets, and the feasibility of Brazil hosting both next year’s FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games being openly questioned.

With the protests still gathering momentum and being constantly redefined, it is difficult to ascertain their real long-term significance with any precision. But after some contemplation, our CSO thinks he might have a few answers:

1. Control. As recently as the 1990s and 2000s, control over Brazilian society was exerted – as much as anything – by the seemingly omnipotent Rede Globo television network, whose mixture of soap operas and vulgar commercialism proved the perfect distraction from life in the favelas. With the rise of Internet penetration and social media, this method of societal regularisation is evidently no longer effective.

2. Development. Intriguingly (and with some parallels to the situation in Turkey), a more inclusive development model whereby the bottom 80% have made clear material gains is being rejected as insufficient to address the monumental chasm between the wealthiest and the poorest in what is still one of the world’s most inequitable nations.

3. Higher Meaning. While the protests have obvious material causes, Brazilians are also rallying against cross-ideological scourges such as corruption, police brutality, state inefficiency and institutional insensitivity. Ideological labels are no longer enough to insulate politicians and administrators in the event of severe underperformance. When millionaire footballers who live and work on the other side of the Atlantic are showing solidarity with their urban poor compatriots, you know that something is changing.

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Macroeconomic Manipulation Situation Latest: ‘LIEBOR’ Scandal Claims Barclays CEO!

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Is the Middle East the new Eastern Europe?

Around twenty years ago, Eastern Europe witnessed tremendous changes to its political and economic structure as the Berlin Wall fell, autocratic rule crumbled and market economics took hold. There have been many theories proposed as to the cause of these profound changes, from the introduction of MTV and the desire to frequent shopping malls to the need for the recognition of thymos. But it is generally accepted that economic mismanagement in these heavily statist economies played a major role in engendering change; less ‘free’ forms of rule, while rarely espoused as an ideal, can often be tolerated – if not indefinitely – if enough financial sweeteners and a functioning economy are provided in lieu of greater openness.

It is in this context which the current price increases for many staple items in Iran appears surprising. Farnaz Fassihi‘s piece in this weekend’s Wall Street Journal quotes figures from the IRNA, the Islamic Republic News Agency, detailing several eye-watering cost hikes, including the following:

1. A 438% increase in the price of household gas;

2. A 300% increase in the per litre price of petrol;

3. An 837% increase in the price of truck diesel; and

4. A 233% increase in the price of lavash flatbread.

These increases – introduced overnight on 20th December 2010 – are part of an officially-termed Smart Subsidy Plan which envisages the phasing out of government subsidies – until now some of the most generous in the region – on the cost of energy and basic good items over a five-year period. The Iranian government estimates that eliminating these will save $100bn annually, but in a country which in 2009 entered the bottom ten nations in the Transparency International Corruption Perception Index and in which unemployment and inflation are already significant problems, this program does not seem to be the most obvious way of encouraging loyalty to the existing system.

With many other countries in the Middle East and North Africa – Saudi Arabia and Egypt are particularly glaring examples – facing similar pressures to rein in gargantuan government programs which suppress the price of food and fuel, and with the Jasmine Revolution having bankrupted the idea that regimes in the region are immovable, Tunis might not yet be the new Berlin, but don’t rule the prospect out entirely.

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