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Investigating Corruption

Investigating Corruption. The Southeast Asian Experience. Traditionally closed areas of public life have been made more open and transparent. What officials own. Corruption in public office. How decisions and policies are made. How much elections cost. Who finances campaigns.

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Investigating Corruption

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  1. Investigating Corruption The Southeast Asian Experience

  2. Traditionally closed areas of public life have been made more open and transparent. • What officials own. • Corruption in public office. • How decisions and policies are made. • How much elections cost. • Who finances campaigns.

  3. I. Investigating Assets (the fruits of corruption) • Comparing asset statements (financial disclosures) with actual assets • Showing disparities between what is declared and what is actually owned by examining other public records • Exposing how officials hide assets (through dummies) or inflate liabilities (through fake loans)

  4. Investigating EstradaFirst Lead: How we began • We got reports from that fancy mansions were being built for mistresses of the President. There were persistent rumors of big amounts of money being given to the President in exchange for government contracts. • There were reports that mistresses of the President were involved in various businesses.

  5. What we Found from Corporate Search: • Estrada and his families are listed as board members of 66 corporations but declared less than 10 companies in his statement of assets. The assets of 14 companies alone total more than P600 M (US$12 M). • But in 1999, Estrada declared a net worth of P35.8M (US$760,000) and a net income of P2.3M ($46,000).

  6. Land Records Showed… 17 Properties worth over P2 billion ($40M)

  7. Paper Trail for Investigating Assets • Statements/Declarations of Assets • Property Records - Land - Companies - Vehicles • Licenses and permits (for businesses, etc.) • Listings, records of trade and professional organizations • Biographies, news articles, family histories

  8. Paper Trail for Investigating Assets • Houses • Vehicles (cars, yachts, planes) • Jewelry, Clothes • Hobbies, recreation • Social affiliations • Bars, restaurants and shops frequented • Foreign travel • Schools of children Cars in Congress

  9. II. Investigating Petty Corruption • Interviews with victims or eyewitnesses • Undercover or surveillance-type investigations • Simple observation • Participant-observation

  10. III. Investigating the consequences of corruption

  11. Corruption in Philippine education • Payoffs eat up 20 to 65% of textbook funds. Because of corruption, textbook:pupil ratio is only 1:6 in grade school and 1:8 in high school. The public school system lacks 70 million textbooks. • Under-deliveries range from 30 to 60% of the total contract. 3.5 million of 15 million schoolchildren do not have a desk or chair.

  12. Validating corruption in the field… Unfinished Bridge in Abra

  13. Estimating the costs of corruption $175-garbage can Sterilizer bought for $29,000 Actual price: $250. Pencils at $2 each

  14. Sector 9th House (%) 11th House (%) 12th House (%) Agricultural Land 58 42 39 Agricultural Enterprises 32 29 29 Fisheries 15 11 8 Banking 9 15 13 Financial Services 21 14 13 Media, Publishing & Telecommunications 11 14 15 Construction 11 13 8 Food Manufacturing 9 11 10 Nonfood Manufacturing 18 17 14 IV. Investigating Conflicts of Interest Business Interests of Congressmen

  15. Databases on line Assets of officials http://www.i-site.ph Political families Political Clans • Cost of legislation Fewer laws, bigger budget

  16. What types of stories succeed? • Well documented evidence of scandalous, individual wrongdoing in high places – especially lifestyles • Sustained reporting on an issue of wide public interest – e.g. education • When public is outraged • When there are reform-oriented politicians or factions pushing for change • Timely release

  17. What types of stories are more difficult? • Systemic, instead of individual, wrongdoing • Complex stories that are hard to explain or to document • Stories that have no fixed constituencies • Stories that involve conflict of interest and other forms of unethical, but not necessarily illegal, behavior where the wrongdoing is not immediately obvious

  18. Despite more openness, money politics and corruption continue. “The press is generally more successful in toppling old regimes than in positively shaping new ones.”

  19. Of 100 Filipino journalists surveyed... • 71 had been offered money by their sources • 33 said they took the money: 22 kept it while 11 turned it over to their editors

  20. In Indonesia… • In 2001, 64 state-owned companies and government departments set aside $173 million for pembinaan wartawan or cultivating journalists. • Alliance of Independent Journalists’ 2001 survey: 70 percent of journalists in East Java and 97 percent in Jakarta admitting to taking envelops of cash.

  21. What needs to be done • Upgrade research & reporting skills • Provide editorial support & direction • Address issues of ethics and journalist’s pay • Ensure access to information • Protect sources • Protect journalists

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