INTERNATIONAL ANTI-CORRUPTION DAY
On 9 December the world marked International Anti-Corruption Day. The day came just a few days after the publication by Transparency International of its annual Corruption Perceptions Index. The bad news is that South Africa is now in 69th position - down five places since last year, and down 31 places since 2001.
Corruption has a corrosive effect on society because it undermines the core principle that government should work for the public interest rather than for the private interests of office-bearers. It penalises and disincentivises those who produce wealth and unfairly rewards the unproductive and parasitic. It distorts economic relationships and adds unnecessary expenses to transactions.
It is a simple truth of human nature that those who possess power will generally use it, overtly or covertly, sooner or later, to advance their personal or group interests. Corruption is essentially the abuse of power to obtain benefits to which one is not - or to which one should not be - entitled.
When we think of corruption, we often have in mind the transfer to officials of bribes in brown paper envelopes. However, corruption goes much further than this - and is often quite legal.
All individuals and groups that come into possession of the Gollum's ring of power are equally inclined to abuse it for the illegitimate promotion of their own interests. Corruption can affect not only national leaders and politicians - but also the electorates who in modern democracies are the final possessors of power.