Korupcija će njemačku ekonomiju u 2012. godini koštati 250 milijardi eura, uprkos činjenici da se upravo ta zemlja nalazi pri vrhu ljestvice Transparency Internationala prema antikorupcijskom indexu, javlja AFP.
Ova procjena, zasnovana na istraživanju Fridriha Šnajdera, profesora ekonomije na Univerzitetu Johan Kepler u Lincu, nadmašila je čak i njegove prognoze od prije sedam godina, kada je izračunao kako će korupcija u njemačkoj ekonomiji “izbušiti rupu” od 220 milijardi eura.
Većina ekonomista se slažu da mito i korupcija između političara i privatnih biznismena zavise o postojećem stanju u ekonomiji. Što je to stanje lošije, to je veća vjerovatnoća da će pojedinci pribjeći davanju plavih koverata.
Ipak, sudeći prema izvještaju Die Welta, na porast korupcije uticali su i neki drugi faktori, odnosno ono što Šnajder naziva “povećanjem loših navika”.
Profesor smatra kako postoje samo dva efektivna načina za sprečavanje korupcije – stroža pravila i teže kazne ili više plate. Dodao je i kako te dvije metode ne moraju nužno isključivati jedna drugu.
Zaključci istraživanja baziraju se na podacima o korupcijskom indexu Transparency Internationala od 1995. godine pa sve do danas. Prema tim podacima, Njemačka zauzima 14 mjesto ljestvice zemalja s najmanje korupcije.
javni.me/index.hr










Pricao mi je nas covjek kako je sredjivao papire za Njemacku tamo u njihovim institucijama cini me se policiji davao 1000.DM onija para da nesto ili prolongora ili sredi ,ja nijesam vjerovaoali a posle jesam nije njemacka sto PRIDJE bese.
I njih je SOCIJALIZAM IZIJO i RAZORIO VREDNOSTI drustva.
Svuđe li su isti!
haha, bravo nebo za tvoju video poruku,
slobodno moze konkurisati mojim krasnim prilozima koje sam ovdje postavio.
Samo nastavi dobar izbor.
Vidite , tamo postoje zajednice poreskih obveznika i to tijelo prati dje i kako se trose drzavne pare postoji neka kontrola trosenja drzavnog novca, zar ove parlamentarce ne mozete nazvati tajkunima dje “legalnim” putem namicu nezaradjene pare zar oni ne uzimlju leb bez motike zar to nije PLJASKASKI socijalizam zamotan u EVROPSKO ruho. Koji nema veze sa slobodnim KAPITALIZMOM.
Vi ste uglavnom do sada pod motom TAJKUNA stavljali ,vektru ,eurofondove i druge privatne firme a na njih kacili i cio ostali i mali isrednji sektor pod harangom
“sive ekonomije” i to radite i dan danas . I bojim se i nemam povjerenja u ove KEKOVICE reformiste da ce tu ista popravit .Nihovi pogledi i stavovi koje su ranije davali nijesu nikako OHRABRUJUCI naprotiv.
Neodoljivo te harange podsecaju na ,KULAKE ,INFOBIROVCE ,kada su pod geslom njihove ‘KRIVICE” stradali i NEDUZN I ljudi, UGLAVNOM.
Kakva je to zemlja i privreda govori i ovaj podatak da im nizak nivo korupcije iznosi nekih 220 000 000 000 eura. Nije samo navedeno za koji vremenski period. Kakogod, mnogo je ovo nula.
Bogati, ali ne od turizma. A imaju sta da ponude, mnogo vise nego mi.
Bogati zbog rudnika, fabrika, proizvodnje, discipline i marljivosti.
A mi i pored svega sto imamo, kao crni Gašo !!!
O radnim navikama, kulturi placanja poreza i sl. da ne govorimo.
I sve to vidimo i gledamo, ali nista. Ima i kod njih korupcije, ali je smijesna naspram one na Sredozemlju.
I jedna prica za kraj, koja pokazuje njihov odnos prema svemu:
Vozimo se nas nekolicina iz CG vozom, najnoviji Siemens, od Frankfurta do Dortmunda i negdje 10 min po polasku prolazi kondukter i, prvo na njemackom a onda i na engleskom, pita da li trebaju nekom karte. Mi smo vec bili kupili karte na stanici, a bi nam cudno zasto nam ih nije trazio na provjeru. Prodje kondukter i nas i ostale sa kartama, pa zastade 10m od nas (valjda da nekom napise kartu ili sta vec!).
Ana ustade i uputi se pravo ka njemu.
“Izvinite, zasto nam niste pregledali karte?! – upita ga na engleskom
Kondukter je zacudjeno pogleda i rece: ” U redu, ako to zelite, sada cu doci do vas!”
“Ali mi smo mogli da ne kupimo karte i da putujemo bez problema!”
“Ali zasto ne biste kupili karte kad se vozite!” – upita kondukter zacudjeno.
E sad zamislite ovu situaciju kod nas.
Sta nas briga, mi imamo more!!!
Turns out, a confounding new study by Friedrich Schneider, an economics professor and corruption researcher at the Johannes Kepler University in Linz, Austria, determined that corruption in Germany would cost the economy €250 billion ($325 billion) in 2012. In 2005, that amount was €220 billion ($286 billion). An increase of 13.6% over seven years.
Corruption is a matter of definition. In this case, it is limited to bribery of civil servants and does not include politicians. They’re in a different class. For example, Christian Wulff, when he was President of Germany, got entangled in revelations last year that he accepted all sorts of favors from affluent benefactors over many years. His faux-pas included threatening the media—well, the tabloid BILD—when he learned that it would publish some new details. And he left his threats as a voice mail. Corrupt doesn't mean smart.
But he was a top politician in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government. And she owed him. In 2005, when he was Premier of Lower Saxony, he announced that he wouldn’t run for the CDU’s nomination for Chancellor; instead, he supported Merkel, then the CDU leader in parliament (Bundestag). So she became Chancellor, and in 2010 he became President. In return, when sunshine hit his activities, she supported him. Popular outrage finally induced him to resign, but instead of being prosecuted, he was awarded an ironically-called Ehrensold (honor pay) of €199,000 ($260,000) per year for life, plus other perks.
And Germany is one of the least corrupt nations on earth! According to the Corruption Perception Index published annually by Transparency International, Germany and Japan are tied for 14th place. New Zealand is at the top, the US in 24th place—the index measures bribery of civil servants, not lobbying, campaign finance, corporate-government backscratching, Fed money handouts…. oops. For some nauseating details on that, read…. The Audit of the Fed Doesn't Call it ‘Corruption’ but it should.
Just behind Germany and Japan is another practically corruption-free country, Austria, where Ewald Nowotny, governor of the Austrian National Bank, is up to his neck in an international criminal scandal. And he is still in his job. For that whole debacle, and how finally a major politician, though perhaps the wrong one, called for his resignation, read…. Bribery, Kickbacks, and Money Laundering at the Austrian Central Bank.
Even the mere bribery of civil servants, Herr Professor Schneider estimates, will cost Germany €250 billion this year. The economic damage comes from the effects when the best offers are bypassed in favor of inferior ones, which curtails investment and stifles growth. He proposes a solution: better pay for civil servants or stricter laws with more severe punishment, or both.
But anti-corruption laws are having trouble getting through the Bundestag. In 2003, Germany signed the United Nations Convention against Corruption, but unlike all other industrialized nations, it never ratified and implemented it, which puts Germany in the company of such illustrious nations as Sudan and Somalia. Of course, China, Gaddafi's Libya, Russia, and Pakistan ratified the Convention, and they're among the most corrupt nations in the world. Changing a few laws isn't going to stop corruption.
This bubbled up again in January when the Wulff scandal was white hot. The opposition SPD proposed to adapt German criminal law to the Convention, making certain acts by members of parliament punishable with up to five years in the hoosegow. But Merkel’s CDU nipped that in the bud.
http://www.testosteronepit.com/home/2012/3/16/inflation-in-the-cost-of-corruption.html