Germany has again placed in the lower mid-field among European countries in the Transparency International index of 133 countries with the cleanest government
Published:
10 October 2003 y., Friday
Germany has again placed in the lower mid-field among European countries in the Transparency International index of 133 countries with the cleanest government, improving slightly from previous years.
Transparency International put Germany at rank 16 in the world, up from position 18 last year. The 2003 index is based on an international survey of businesspeople, who are asked about the prevalence of bribes and other corruption in the awarding of public contracts and approvals. Scandinavian countries dominated the top 10, with Finland deemed to have the most honest civil service.
Šaltinis:
faz.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Mr Andreotti is relieved the long-running case is over
more »
The Asar public movement transformed itself into a political party and unanimously elected Darigha Nazarbaeva, eldest daughter of Kazakh President, the party's leader
more »
POLISH EDITOR CHANGES TESTIMONY IN RYWINGATE SCANDAL
more »
Romanians began voting Saturday on whether to approve a new constitution that would guarantee private property rights and allow foreigners to own land
more »
Germany has again placed in the lower mid-field among European countries in the Transparency International index of 133 countries with the cleanest government
more »
The Kremlin's hand-picked man to lead Chechnya was declared the winner Monday in the region's presidential vote
more »
A day after allegations of sexual harassment seemed to ruin Arnold chances for the California governor polls, his wife Maria Shriver came to his rescue
more »
Tens of thousands of people demonstrated across Europe and the Middle East yesterday against the US-led occupation of Iraq
more »
The show, in its fifth year, provides a proving ground for all things wireless
more »
Germany’s Federal Statistics Office announced figures on Friday which show a continued increase in the number of children born in Germany to foreign parents
more »