Jakarta Globe, Ethan Harfenist & Erwida Maulia, December 05, 2012
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Berlin-based
Transparency International has released its annual Corruption Perceptions Index
for 2012, with Indonesia sliding in this year’s rankings despite increased
foreign investment and a bigger global profile.
Southeast
Asia’s largest economy was ranked 118th out of 176 countries polled, down from
100th out of 183 the year before, and tied with Madagascar, Egypt, Ecuador and
the Dominican Republic.
According
to Transparency International’s website, the index “scores countries on a scale
from 0 [highly corrupt] to 100 [very clean]. While no country has a perfect
score, two-thirds of countries score below 50, indicating a serious corruption
problem.”
Indonesia
scored 32 on the scale. The anticorruption watchdog used nine surveys on the
country to determine its ranking.
Transparency
International Indonesia manager Franky Simanjuntak said on Wednesday that
Indonesia performed worse than the Philippines this year, which ranked 105th,
when it had traditionally ranked lower than Indonesia.
But
Vietnam, which fared better than Indonesia last year, dropped to 123th position
in the 2012 index.
Most other
countries in the region, including Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand, again
performed better than Indonesia, at 5th, 54th and 88th, respectively.
Laos
finished at 160th and Myanmar at 172nd.
Franky said
this year’s score could not be compared with those in previous years, which
used a scale from 0 to 10. Indonesia scored 3.0 in 2011.
“We use a
different method now. And with this new method, starting from this year we can
compare year-on-year scores,” Franky said, adding that the previous method did
not actually allow comparisons of year-on-year figures.
“But with
the 30-something score, we can say that Indonesia remains in the cluster of
countries with significant corruption problems, relative to other countries
surveyed,” he added.
Denmark,
Finland and New Zealand shared the 1st position in this year’s rankings,
scoring 90, followed by Sweden and Singapore.
Afghanistan,
North Korea and Somalia shared the bottom place, scoring 8 each.
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