Getting Corruption Right
December 31, 2010
Friends and Fellow Malaysians, I wish to end this year (2010) with Jagdish Bhagwati’s article on “Getting Corruption Right”. It is my New Year fervent hope that our Government deals firmly with the corrupt in our country. In 2011, we will see two senior politicians, Tun Ling Leong Sik, and Khir Toyo in our courts. More can be expected given the fact that the new year is likely to be an Election Year (both National and Sarawak state elections).
Political temperatures will rise, but I am confident that as a nation of mature and intelligent Malaysians, we will be able to stay sensible, rational, and responsible as we debate issues and discuss the future of our wonderful country, warts and all. –Din Merican
Getting Corruption Right
by Jagdish Bhagwati (December 29, 2010)
NEW YORK – I just returned from India, where I was lecturing to the Indian Parliament in the same hall where US President Barack Obama had recently spoken. The country was racked by scandal. A gigantic, ministerial-level scam in the mobile-telephone sector had siphoned off many billions of dollars to a corrupt politician.
But several of the MPs had also been taken aback on discovering that when Obama spoke to them, he read from an “invisible” teleprompter. This had misled his audience into thinking that he was speaking extemporaneously, a skill that is highly regarded in India.
Both episodes were seen as a form of corruption: one involved money, the other deception.
The two transgressions are obviously not equal in moral turpitude. But the Obama episode illustrates an important cross-cultural difference in assessing how corrupt a society is.
Transparency International and occasionally the World Bank like to rank countries by their degree of corruption, with the media then ceaselessly citing where each country stands. But cultural differences between countries undermine the legitimacy of such rankings – which are, after all, based on surveys of the public. What Obama was doing was a common enough practice in the United States (though one might expect better from an orator of his ability); it was not so in India, where such a technique is, indeed, regarded as reprehensible.
India certainly has corruption, like almost every other country. But India also has a culture in which people commonly assume that everyone in public life is corrupt unless they prove otherwise. Even a blind man will tell Transparency International: “I saw him take a bribe with my own eyes.” Indeed, a distinguished Indian bureaucrat, a man of unimpeachable character, once told me that his mother had told him: “I believe you are not corrupt only because you are my son!”
So, if you ask Indians whether their governance is marked by widespread corruption, they will answer with gusto: yes! But their exuberance biases India’s global ranking relative to more empirically minded countries.
A similar bias arises from the occasional tendency to view political patronage elsewhere as being more corrupt than the same practices at home. For example, when the East Asian financial crisis broke out, there followed a systematic attempt to pin the blame on the affected countries: “crony capitalism” allegedly had somehow crippled their economies! In other words, the acquaintances and benefactors of the East Asian leaders were “cronies,” whereas those of US leaders were “friends”?
In fact, it was clear that the culprits were the International Monetary Fund and the US Treasury, which had encouraged a shift to capital-account convertibility without understanding that the case for free capital flows was not symmetrical with the case for free trade.
But where substantial corruption can unambiguously be found, as it often can, one must recognize that it is not a cultural given. On the contrary, often it is the result of policies that have fed it.
India in the 1950’s had a civil service, and a political class, that were the envy of the world. If that seems shocking today, the loss of virtue must be traced to the all-pervasive “permit raj,” with its licensing requirements to import, produce, and invest, which grew to gargantuan proportions. High-level bureaucrats quickly discovered that licenses could be bartered for favors, while politicians saw in the system the means to help important financial backers.
Once the system had taken root, corruption percolated downward, from senior bureaucrats and politicians, who could be bribed do what they were not supposed to do, to lower-level bureaucrats, who would not do what there were supposed to do unless bribed. Clerks would not bring out files, or get you your birth certificate or land title, unless you greased their palms.
But if policies can create corruption, it is equally true that the cost of corruption will vary with the specific policies. The cost of corruption has been particularly high in India and Indonesia, where policies created monopolies that earned scarcity rents, which were then allocated to officials’ family members.
Such “rent-creating” corruption is quite expensive and corrosive of growth. By contrast, in China, the corruption has largely been of the “profit-sharing” variety, whereby family members are given a stake in the enterprise so that their earnings increase as profits increase – a type of corruption that promotes growth.
In the long run, of course, both types of corruption are corrosive of the respect and trust that good governance requires, which can undermine economic performance in its own right. But that does not absolve us of the responsibility to define corruption properly – and to acknowledge obvious and important cultural differences in how it is understood.
Jagdish Bhagwati, Professor of Economics and Law at Columbia University and Senior Fellow in International Economics at the Council on Foreign Relations, is the author of Termites in the Trading System: How Preferential Trade Agreements Undermine Free Trade.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2010.
www.project-syndicate.org

Enjoy the New Year with gusto, Din and all.
It’s been fun making friends with you guys.
Let’s pray 2011 will be better for us.
Encore!
Pak Abu - December 31, 2010 at 8:09 pm
HAPPY AND BLESSED NEW YEAR to all, including BN PKR, Harris n Gang. Let the New year be a Change that will be beneficial to all of us. If it is to be BN for the next 4 years, so be it. Lets work for this 1Malaysia, superficial as it may be. God bless Malaysia, oops!! 1malaysia
Brian - December 31, 2010 at 8:41 pm
sunshine - December 31, 2010 at 9:43 pm
In 2011, we will see two senior politicians, Din
“should have read two corrupted BN politician”
May the new year be better for Malaysia and may these corrupted BN politicians be guided and return to the straight path and may the rakyat teach these politicians a lesson and not vote them in at the next GE. That’s all I wish for Malaysia.
semper fi - December 31, 2010 at 10:53 pm
HAPPY NEW YEAR to ALL!
…except those corrupted politicians, may they be swamped and infested with fleas, ticks and maggots.
hurricaneMax - December 31, 2010 at 11:27 pm
We are in 2011 now. Fancy we have completed a decade of the 21st century. Today is 1111. Good luck to all.–Din Merican
dinobeano - January 1, 2011 at 12:39 am
Din Merican has retired early tonite to welcome the new year …. *hic*
Mr Bean - January 1, 2011 at 2:51 am
“….that as a nation of mature and intelligent Malaysians, we will be able to stay sensible, rational, and responsible …” Din
Cheers to that.
But that cannot be said of our politicians from both sides of politics.
I look forward to 2011 to be further entertained by the circus antics from the folks walking the corridors of Putrajaya. Otherwise 2011 will be so ever boring.
Frank - January 1, 2011 at 3:11 am
Happy New Year to ALL !
For 2011…Election Year ?
“Discard the Old…Elect the New !”
Hidup Malaysia !!!
fairplay - January 1, 2011 at 7:13 am
HAPPY NEW YEAR, all.
It has been fun following this blog. I wonder if the crooked politicians ,all of ‘em, read it too.
Hope the electorates read so they can make judgement and maybe see changes for the better – zak
Zakgaz - January 1, 2011 at 8:08 am
Dont think that corruption is just an external factor. The manifestation of corrupt conduct is the reflection of a corrupt mindset. So we need to correct the mindset first and foremost then all will fall into place. It is the unlearning and relearning, that is what needs to be done starting today, the 1.1.11,with ourselves.
A ver Happy New year everyone.
Kathy - January 1, 2011 at 8:17 am
“When Injustice becomes Law, then Resistance becomes Duty”
Kathy - January 1, 2011 at 9:27 am
“When Injustice becomes Law, then Resistance becomes Duty”-Kathy
Then the French is right for storming the Bastille.
Credit should be given to the English for confronting the monarchy by chopping off the head of King Charles I.
HERE IS A COMPULSORY HISTORY FOR OUR SCHOOL CHILDREN
Charles engaged in a struggle for power with the Parliament of England, whilst Parliament sought to curb his Royal prerogative which Charles believed was divinely ordained. Many of his English subjects opposed his actions without parliamentary consent which grew to be seen as those of a tyrannical absolute monarch.
H e fought the forces of the English and Scottish Parliaments, which challenged the king’s attempts to overrule and negate Parliamentary authority, whilst simultaneously using his position as head of the English Church to pursue religious policies which generated the antipathy of reformed groups such as the Puritans.
Charles was defeated in the First Civil War (1642–45), after which Parliament expected him to accept its demands for a constitutional monarchy. He instead remained defiant.
He subsequently captured, tried, convicted, and executed for high treason.
The monarchy was then abolished and a republic called the Commonwealth of England, also referred to as the Cromwellian Interregnum, was declared.
Charles’ son, Charles II, though he became king at the death of his father, did not take up the reins of government until the restoration of the monarchy in 1660.
Frank - January 1, 2011 at 1:01 pm
It is a sad fact of human history that for change to happen people have to die and be sacrificied for the Rights of Humans. How much do we want change in Ms’ia to happen? We didnt do it right the first 50 years, there was no demnad by the people from those who governed us and are elected to serve us. Now we have to fight real hard for this change, for our own omission. The West had to do it albeit thousands died for the cause. How badly do we want change to happen?
Kathy - January 1, 2011 at 3:42 pm
“How badly do we want change to happen?”- Kathy
Me? I don’t mind loose change, even in small coins.
Frank - January 1, 2011 at 8:59 pm
tourman53 - January 2, 2011 at 3:18 am
2011 – CIRCUS
Despite the best efforts of our blog host, the circus has not left town. Once again we are about to be treated to the same antics by the same clowns. The cast may have grown to include new ones but the tricks and the script will remain the same. So to those lining up to buy tickets for the next show, may I suggest that you come with pocketfuls of downers and uppers and lots of anti-depressants because you are going to need them. But it is the show on the side that steals the lime light.
In 2011, we will see our retired general Tok Cik furiously working on his routine to make up for lost time, in the back seat of his Cooper S that has seen better times, showing off or should I say flashing his kukri to the delight of anak mami along Gurney Drive. We will see Tean-Rean a saffron-robed monk trying to persuade exotic dancers to get off the pole in Patpong of all places. He stands a better chance persuading his kerbau from wallowing in the mud in the shadows of Gunung Jerai. We will see Shrek parading in his old tattered U.S. Marine uniform – military surplus he bought off the flea market in his neck of the wood which is Los Angeles — followed by Menyalak-er forever trying to disentangle himself from the intellectual cobweb he has spun for himself. Nobody could understand why. We will see café-latte Frank (Malaysia’s own Christopher Hitchens) who worked so hard to gain the high moral ground on Din’s blog, only to find God was there first.
Saving the best for last, there is the innocent and energetic Khatijah (slow to learn about the birds and the bees but better late than never) who landed herself Down Under after having been converted to sufism and taken the unlikely name of Kathy, who played the role of damsel in distress and had a hard time freeing herself from the clasp of Sir Lancelot who has since been rendered speechless.
Have I left anybody out? If I have, many apologies.
A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL.
Mr Bean - January 2, 2011 at 5:27 am
It may be the 2nd day of the new year for you but it is still the 1st day for me.
Mr Bean - January 2, 2011 at 5:33 am
Happy New year Mr Bean! YOu started it!…It is unlikely isnt it this name Kathy. I still beleive that M’sia can change okay despite the show now. It will happen.
Kathy - January 2, 2011 at 5:51 am
Saaap! Kat. ‘Kathy’ is fine on you. Happy New Year to you.
Mr Bean - January 2, 2011 at 6:08 am
This one’s for you Kat. Old geezers know this song as sung by the Everly Brothers in the ’60s.
Mr Bean - January 2, 2011 at 6:16 am
Ta very much! Hope the cold isnt too damaging!
Kathy - January 2, 2011 at 6:37 am
A record snow fall of up to 32 inches in my neck of the woods. Winds of up to 50 mph. Blizzard. Electrical storm.
I wish I was in Perth, Western Australia where I spent some time not too long ago. Nice Mediterranean weather. Superb watering holes.
Mr Bean - January 2, 2011 at 7:07 am
Thanks for the intro, Bean.
I don’t think my Cooper S can take the strain any longer. May have to change for a more sturdy jalopy one that can take the load of two anak mamis in the rear seat.
For a moment I thought you’re on the bandwagon. Nice to know you’re back.
The scenario will not change much in 2011. The main casts are still active in the play while the supporting crew are struggling along.
The last time I saw tean he was singing auld lang syne to the kerbau. What a pair they make.
Cheers.
Tok Cik - January 2, 2011 at 8:48 pm
Tok Cik,
There is one anak mami look-alike (because she actually hails from Kelantan) that I miss and she’s married to Sharizat’s brother. Don’t know if she still is. She’d be a handful even for you.
Mr Bean - January 2, 2011 at 10:01 pm
From Kelantan means anak Pahtan lah. I am game, Bean. My back seat can accommodate one more….
Tok Cik - January 2, 2011 at 10:20 pm
Guys & Gals,
I am extremely happy that finally one fella to check out on the English Civil war history. Realising that actually that England was once a de-facto republic country. Not USA & certainly not France….
I am extremely happy not to vote for Liberal in 1997 in Guildford…..I expected that Lib-Dem reneged on their promises….My decision is right…..Plus, hehehe, it’s bad to get Tory back into power. Whoops! there goes my inclinication to New Labour…..Hehehe! By the way, LKY of Singapore was fond of Labour. So do I……Even my dad asked me…..Son, you voted Tony Blair……That was in 1997
looes74 - January 2, 2011 at 11:47 pm
I dont get the message : Getting Corruption Right ! ? ?
Do you mean that to indulge in corruption one must do it ” right ” – doing it the right way ?
If that be the case, then there is only ONE WAY to get it right : it appears to be that if one is a VIP whom the authorities want to protect all the way, that would amount to indulge in corruption the ” right ” way !
So for ordinary people worth ” two-cents ” if they are caught for two-cents worth of corrupt money, that’s a terrible, terrible wrong way : you will be HANGED, literally…..
I am not sure I got it right, dont blame me, I have got everything confused by the current state of events……
Abnizar7 - January 7, 2011 at 10:13 am
Frank ,
I laud your up-date on how Charles was deposed by Cromwell’s uprising, from whence emanated the Magna-Carta & the Bill of Rights ! Agreed, too much of oppression & bloodshed, just to set matters ” right ” ! For them, the beginning of the Westminister-model has become so sacred, that everything which evolved under ” Seperation Of Powers ” in modern-day democratic process has become Sacrosanct & irreversible ( akin to “God-given laws “, literally : they’ll defend tooth & nail ! )
Under Mahathirism, it began the era to ” eradicate ” this culture in UK or Western-educated hypes of Malaysians whom the ” new UMNO ” labelled as ” the neo-colonialists ” breed indoctrinated by the West .
I tuly believe that this was the beginning of the era of DECLINE, because a great many brilliant Malaysians were ” axed “, marginilised or else scoffed, so that professionals shied away from the political game that has gone terribly awry for Malaysia.
What we should have valued is we had learnt by the horrible & nasty experiences of others that had involved in bloodshed of the masses & gruesome beheading of two Mighty Monarchs – King Charles & Lous XIV of France !
Can we put that in our ” history ” here because ,it is also the common heritage of Mankind ? Or, will we be branded again as ” neo-colonialist ” who have been brain-washed by the ” Whites ” ?
,
Abnizar7 - January 8, 2011 at 1:50 pm