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1 What are Adequate Procedures? ACFE March 1st 2011 Robert Barrington Director of External Affairs, Transparency International UK
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2 Key features of the UK Bribery Act Result of external pressure on UK government ‘By no means stricter than …other OECD member states’ Extra-territorial Corporate liability
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3 Adequate Procedures A legal defence for ‘failure to prevent bribery’ [Bribery Act, section 7] Outlined in UK Government Guidance Not a defence for a company that has knowingly paid a bribe
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4 What is adequate?
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5 1. The Six Principles Transparency International’s view
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6 Six Principles 1. Tone from the Top 2. Risk assessment 3. Detailed Policies & Procedures 4. Implementation 5. Due diligence 6. Monitoring & Review
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7 2. Corruption risk-mapping
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8 Corruption Perceptions Index
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9 Ranks countries 1-180 Scores countries 0-10 Measures perceptions of public sector corruption 133 countries score less than 5 out of 10 2010 best performers: NZ, Denmark, Singapore, Finland, Sweden 2010 worst performers: Somalia, Myanmar, Afghanistan Undertaken annually
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10 Bribe Payers Index 2008 Country’s companies least likely to pay bribes Country’s companies most likely to pay bribes 22 countries ranked representing 75% of global exports of goods and services and outflows of foreign direct investment in 2006. Based on responses of 2,742 senior business executives from companies in 26 developed and developing countries, chosen by the volume of imports and inflows of foreign direct investment. Conducted every two years RankCountryScore 1Belgium8.8 1Canada8.8 3NL/Switzerland8.7 RankCountryScore 20Mexico6.2 21China6.1 22Russia5.2
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11 Bribe Payers Index: high-risk sectors Bribery of Public Officials by Sectors 2008 Worst performers Public works contracts & construction5.2 Real estate & property development5.7 Oil & gas5.9 Heavy manufacturing6.0 Mining6.0 Best performers Banking & finance7.1 Fisheries7.1 likelihood of companies in each sector to bribe public officials [possible scores range from 0 to 10. 0 represents the view that ‘bribes are almost always paid’ and 10 that ‘bribes are never paid’ by a sector] – extract below of best and worst performers. Source? TI Bribe Payers Index 2008
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12 Global Corruption Barometer Citizen’s view of corruption in their own countries Opinion survey of 77,000 citizens conducted in c.75 countries Every two years
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13 Where are bribes paid? [source: Global Corruption Barometer 2010]
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14 Perceptions and reality: CPI vs GCB? [source: Corruption Perceptions Index & Global Corruption Barometer 2010]
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15 Other risk areas Country risk Sectoral risk Transaction risk – eg licences, permits, procurement Opportunity risk – eg high-value contracts Partnership risk – eg joint ventures, local agents
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16 3. Adequate Procedures tools
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17 Business Principles for Countering Bribery High-level principles Developed by TI Multi-stakeholder process Similar to PACI and ICC
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18 Definitions
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19 Adequate Procedures Guidance
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20 20-point ABC checklist Board member’s airport checklist Global comparison score in your sector [Materials]: number of companies reviewed: 46 highest score: 45 points; 5 stars lowest score: 0 points; 0 stars median average score: 18
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21 4. Conclusions
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22 Conclusions Don’t pay bribes Tone from the top – corporate culture – zero tolerance approach Fully analyse and understand the risks Put in place a robust anti-corruption system Don’t rely solely on the government guidance Don’t pay bribes
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23 Documents and links available at: www.transparency.org www.transparency.org.uk www.adequateprocedures.org.uk
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