Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,192,217 members, 7,947,105 topics. Date: Thursday, 12 September 2024 at 12:35 PM

The Fight Against Corruption In International Trade - Business - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Business / The Fight Against Corruption In International Trade (233 Views)

Lagos International Trade Fair Reopened After Sudden Closure / BREAKING The Entire Lagos International Trade Fair Complex Sealed Off / Fire At Lagos International Trade Complex (Photos) (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

The Fight Against Corruption In International Trade by DonBrad: 9:32am On Jun 20, 2018
One of the greatest challenges in the global fight against corruption is the inability to clearly outline the totality of what constitutes and does not constitute corruption. While there have been plausible attempts to substantiate the personality of corruption, the problem largely lies in the fact that corruption means different things to different nations, institutions, organizations, and people.

Though there are certain universally acceptable definitions of what does and does not constitute corruption, the entirety of the elements that constitute trade corruption in the US may not apply in China, India, Nigeria or even in the UK.

The question then is, What is corruption? What activities culminate in corruption?

At what point can one conclude that an individual, a group or an organization have engaged in corrupt practices? How do such practices affect international trade and the global fight against corruption?



What is Corruption?

Transparency International defines corruption as “the abuse of entrusted power for private gain” In other words, against the popular point of view, corruption does not begin and end with bribery alone. Abuse of legitimate authority or the deployment of same to influence clearly established procedures and defined courses of action for personal gains is corruption.

On the other hand, bribery is almost an acceptable norm in international trade – especially in the third world countries; a predictable evil and a conniving means of getting regulatory agents to expeditiously perform services that they are statutorily obliged to perform in the first place.

In response to this global scourge, the following laws among many others have been established to stamp-out corruption/bribery-related offences and punish offenders:

UN Convention Against Corruption (2003).
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (US: 1977).
Bribery Act (U.K:2010)
The organization of Economic Cooperation & Development (OECD) Anti-Bribery Convention (1997)
African Development Bank (ADB)-OECD Action Plan for the Asia Pacific (2001).
African Union Convention on Preventing/Combating Corruption (2004).
G20 Anti-Corruption Action Plan (2010).
Amendment No.8 to article 164 (China:2011).
Federal Law No. 97-FZ (Russia:2011).



Together, these laws seek to stamp out or reduce corruption in business to almost a zero level globally and aim to standardize the following:

Punish those who offer bribes and those who accept them.
Making these laws extra-territorial i.e. applicable across global boundaries.
Making bribery of any kind of criminal offence.
Laws to apply to regulatory/public officers across the world.
Issue standardized penalties for both individual or colluding corporate entities.
Corporate liability for erring organizations – including the risk of being black-listed
corruption in freight forwarding

Risk Exposures to Bribery & Corruption

Nick Maxwell (Transparency International:2014) pointed out three major risks that are associated with bribery and corruption – legal, organizational and reputational.

Legal
Prosecution, leading to long-term legal battle which will cost the organization time and money.
Fines and imprisonment (for individuals) and corporate liability for organizations.
Large legal and compliance costs.


Organisational
Loss of focus – takes up management time to plan for the business because being on the wrong side of the law will distract any organization from its original business goals.




- Reputational
- Brand reputation damage
- Loss of trustworthiness, key customers, and strategic global partnerships
- Decrease in morale


Call it lobbying, tipping, blocking or appreciation (depending on what part of the world you’re operating), if it influences the decision of any party involved in a transaction process – even against established procedures, it is corruption.

Anything that causes a regulatory agent(s) like Customs for instance to commit an error of commission or omission or turns the natural course of events on its head, for gains other than those established by law, is corruption. We must admit that the global campaigns against it have recorded enormous success – especially in the US, UK, and many other advanced nations but the scourge is still very much alive in many developing economies – including Nigeria.

That is why Fortune Global continues to campaign for a corrupt-free business environment, having built her business on the firm foundation of transparency and compliance with the law.

Source: http://blog.fglobalshipping.com/the-fight-against-corruption-in-international-trade/
Credits: Fortune Global Shipping and Logistics Limited https://fglobalshipping.com/

(1) (Reply)

Palm Oil For Sale / Contact The Best SMSF Service Provider For The Secure Investments / Samsung Enmeshed In N65m Copyright Infringement Lawsuit In Nigeria

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 14
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.