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31st January 2023
10:49am GMT

"Our performance on the index has improved since 2012 gradually but this is the first year that we've noticed a significant jump or improvement in our performance year on year. "It's the first time we've finished above the UK in 25 years and the first time ever that we've finished ahead of Canada and Australia. "I think that's in large part because of the absence of a major controversy that's attracted international attention, unlike 98/99 when Ireland suffered a sharp drop in our score. "We haven't seen the kind of coverage of, or revelations of, corruption rather that the tribunals exposed. "The Mahon Tribunal concluded that corruption was systemic in local government and politics back in the '80s and '90s."Devitt pointed out that while Ireland has had its "fair share" of controversies recently, "they're not at the same level that they were back in the late 1990s and are certainly not attracting the same kind of attention that events in Westminster and Whitehall have received recently". Despite the good news, the chief executive warned that corruption is "something that every country encounters". "No country on the index, even those at the very top including Denmark, are free of corruption," he explained.
"We need to take a risk-based approach to tackling the problem by reforming the way in which, in Ireland in particular, reforming the way in which our public officials disclose information and share it with the Standards in Public Office Commission. "Currently that system is outdated. Our ethics laws haven't been reformed in over 20 years."You can see the full version of the latest Corruption Perceptions Index right here. This article originally appeared on JOE Header image via Gadiel Lazcano on Unsplash READ ON: Colin Farrell calls getting nominated for an Oscar 'a bit of craic'
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