Local firms also take
blame for officials’ corruption
Local enterprises
have become more actively involved in bribe taking and giving in a vicious
cycle that they should somehow be able to escape, said an expert from the
World Bank in a seminar in HCMC last week.
Soren Davidsen from the World Bank
(WB) told a seminar in HCMC on Thursday that Vietnamese enterprises were
believed to have played an active role in giving bribes to corrupt officials.
The seminar, one of activities held
before the anti-corruption dialogue between the Government and international
donors in
More than 75% of the enterprises when
asked said they had given bribes despite not being suggested to do so while
59% of the surveyed companies informed they had handed gifts or money to
State officials, Davidsen quoted the figures from a recent survey conducted
by the WB and the Inspectorate.
Meanwhile, 63% of the corporate
respondents replied that they gave unofficial monies to create an implicit
mechanism so that their business troubles would be solved quickly.
“This means that local companies have
played a role in creating the vicious circle of corruption,” he stressed.
The process began with a civil servant
intentionally causing troubles in procedures, prompting companies to offer
bribes to get the troubles removed, he explained. The official has then
repeated the deplorable action since then for illegal gains.
Business in HCMC said that corruption
was one of the three most headache-causing problems they were facing after
price hikes and falling revenue, Davidsen said.
Quoting the surveys on corruption
faced by local enterprises conducted by the WB and the Inspectorate between
2007 and 2012, Davidsen said that as local firms have seen no signs of
corruption abating, they think the practices have become more widespread now.
According to Nguyen Quang Vinh of the
Business Office for Sustainable Development under VCCI, around 50-60% of the
respondents in the provincial competitiveness index survey conducted by VCCI
annually reported their problems had been handled upon the unofficial expense
payment.
“This means that the number of
enterprises failing to have their problems solved after giving unofficial
expenses is very high,” Vinh said.
According to Davidsen, up to 88% of
those polled attributed State officials’ corruption to their worsening
ethical merits while up to 79% of State officials blamed their bad deeds on
low wages.
Lawyer Tran Trong Tien from the Phap
Tien Law Office warned local enterprises of continuing to suffer from
corruption if they did not manage to improve legal knowledge themselves.
However, the fact shows that local
authorities and entities now are seeking ways to wipe out corruption.
In particular, Le Thanh Nguyen,
director of the hi-tech business incubator at the Saigon Hi-tech Park, said
his park had signed covenants on anti-corruption with 13 firms operational
there like Intel, FPT Software Company and DGS Electronic Company. The
covenants include supporting business morality and business operation subject
to legal compliance and fighting corruption and power abuse.
Source: SGT
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Thứ Tư, 30 tháng 10, 2013
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