Widespread unrest in the Middle East has focused world attention on demands for political reform and the dangers of gross economic inequalities. Meanwhile, global media have extensively covered the violent confrontations between protestors and government forces in the streets of a number of Arab countries. Seemingly lost in the clamor is one of the main thrusts behind the protests — the demand for an end to corruption.

In Qatar’s capital of Doha, a small group of law enforcement, policy makers, corporate compliance officers and academics organized by the U.S. Department of Commerce, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the UN Development Program, met in May to discuss how to combat regional corruption. It is no easy task, participants agreed, partly because various forms of corruption occur within the public and private sectors in the Arab world, and partly because of a number of cultural, political and law enforcement challenges that have prevented needed reforms.

“In the region there’s a close relationship between the ruling elite and the business elite,” said Wharton legal studies and business ethics professor Philip Nichols, who addressed the conference. “So one aspect of controlling corruption in this region is drawing lines, and creating some kind of distinction between a person’s role here and there, and a cultural recognition that the responsibility to govern is distinct from the responsibility to take care of your friends and family.”

The scale of the problem is illustrated in a January report done by the Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group Global Financial Integrity, said Ahmed Sakr Ashour, a professor of management at Egypt’s Alexandria University. The report noted that four of the top 10 countries in the world for illicit financial flows — including monies for bribery and tax evasion — were Gulf nations. All of the outflow amounts, Ashour added, were measured in the hundreds of billions.

Despite the challenges that were noted, systemic corruption is not an irreversible state, Nichols added. “In the past we studied Hong Kong, which was once a very corrupt economy, and we studied Singapore, which was once a very corrupt economy, and now both are among the cleanest, least corrupt countries in the world.”

Note: Read the complete article in Arabic Knowledge at Wharton

Comments

New This Week

Evaluating Greenspan’s Legacy and the Evolution of Monetary Policy
Podcast

Evaluating Greenspan’s Legacy and the Evolution of Monetary Policy

June 26, 202616 min listen

Jeremy Siegel examines Alan Greenspan’s legacy, the Federal Reserve’s evolving approach under new leadership, and the economic outlook for interest rates.

Private Credit Risks and the Threat of Market Contagion
Podcast

Private Credit Risks and the Threat of Market Contagion

June 24, 202613 min listen

Wharton finance professor examines private credit market vulnerabilities, investor redemptions, liquidity risks, and the potential for broader financial instability.

How Forced Labor Scrutiny Shapes Supply Chain Transparency

How Forced Labor Scrutiny Shapes Supply Chain Transparency

June 23, 20269 min read

A study co-authored by Wharton’s Sandra Schafhäutle examines why companies choose to hide their names in public shipping data.