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Advancing Transparency and Accountability in Public Utilities. Prepared for Regulated Industries Commission Symposium Series held on the 25th of February, 2010. Bldg 7, Unit 4-12, Fernandes Industrial Centre, Eastern Main Road, Laventille, Trinidad + Tobago, W.I.
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Advancing Transparency and Accountability in Public Utilities Prepared for Regulated Industries Commission Symposium Series held on the 25th of February, 2010 Bldg 7, Unit 4-12, Fernandes Industrial Centre, Eastern Main Road, Laventille, Trinidad + Tobago, W.I. Tel/Fax +(868) 626-5756 www.transparency.org.tt
COST OF CORRUPTION Annual Total Costs of Corruption (Including: Bribes, Cartel Pricing, Fraud,Illicit Trade and Money Laundering) THIS DWARFS THE SPENDING ON: United Nations Millennium Development Goals - US$60 billion World Food Program 2008 - US$3.72 billion (146 million people including 62.2 million children) Haiti Reconstruction (estimate) - US$11 billion Polio eradication programme (3 year)- US$2.6 billion US$1 trillion – US$1.6 trillion Sources: World Bank, TI Global Corruption Barometer 2009, United Nations, The Guardian, World Health Organisation, World Food Program
CORRUPTION FUELS INEQUALITIES • Example: In the Water Sector • 1.2 billion people worldwide without water • 2.6 billion without adequate sanitation • Corruption exacerbates the water crisis faced by the poor and vulnerable • Cost • US$210billion annually for developed countries • Accounts for as much as a 30% increase on connections to domestic households in developing countries
WHY ARE PUBLIC UTILITIES SO VULNERABLE TO CORRUPTION? • Underdeveloped management systems • Inadequate management information • Weak accountability structures • Weak procurement • Large investment of state funds in complex projects • It’s where private and public agencies meet • Involves informal service providers e.g. water trucks • No penalties for failure
HOW CAN THE SECTOR RESPOND TO THE RISK OF CORRUPTION? • Implementation of Business Ethics systems • Institute preventative measures e.g. transparent procurement systems • Whistleblower protection • Integrity pacts • Enforce sanctions for breaches of ethics • Higher levels of transparency
CHARTING A WAY FORWARD • Supporting and initiating more research into understanding corruption in public utilities. • Strengthening current regulatory framework with a review mechanism. • Ensure transparency, accountability, value for money in awarding contracts. E.g. use of the TI Integrity Pact as a legally binding instrument. • Encourage participation by stakeholders in oversight and governance of the sector.