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DATE=10/27/1999 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=LATAM/CORRUPTION STUDY(L-O) NUMBER=2-255529 BYLINE=BILL RODGERS DATELINE=RIO DE JANIERO INTERNET=YES CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: An international non-governmental group that measures corruption world-wide says there has been little improvement during the past year in Latin America. V-O-A's Bill Rodgers in Rio de Janeiro reports the assessment, from the group Transparency International, says the region continues to suffer from widespread corruption. TEXT: Transparency International says Chile was the only Latin-American country to be ranked among the world's 20 countries perceived to be the least corrupt. Chile placed 19th in the group's 1999-index that ranks 99-nations. The study by Transparency International, which was released Tuesday, is based on surveys with multi- national companies, government officials, and the general public. These surveys measure the extent to which bribery is perceived to be a common practice. The index also is based on corruption assessments made by firms that measure investment risk in nations. The study indicates poverty is one of the factors contributing to wide-spread corruption -- and the index shows developed nations tend to be ranked among the least corrupt. In general, Latin American countries fell in the middle of the 99-nation index. Brazil, for example, is in 45th place -- with more corruption than Chile, Costa Rica, Peru, and Uruguay - but the survey says far less than Venezuela or Bolivia. Still, the head of Transparency International in Brazil, David Fleischer, says Brazil's score means that investors have to be wary. /// FLEISCHER ACT /// It is a sign that investors have to look carefully at Brazil before they invest, in terms of whether in their sector corruption is an extra transaction cost of doing business in Brazil. /// END ACT /// // OPT // Mr. Fleischer notes the information used to determine Brazil's ranking did not include revelations earlier this year from various investigations into corruption. Because of this, he believes next year's index will put Brazil in a worse position. /// FLEISCHER ACT /// The surveys were done in 1997 and `98. This means they were done before what Brazilians call `our boom of corruption', with all the investigating committees in Congress and in the municipal governments really hit the fan in April, May and June. So we expect next year, in the year 2000, that what is going on in Brazil now will have quite an impact on the survey done in 1999 and probably Brazil will end up worse with more perception of corruption in the index done in the year 2000. /// END ACT & OPT /// Paraguay, ranked 90th, and Honduras, at 94, had the lowest scores among Latin American nations in this year's Transparency International index. Transparency-Brazil head, David Fleischer, says the index's results should be a wake-up call for countries to strengthen their institutions so they can crack down on corruption. (SIGNED) NEB/WFR/RAE 27-Oct-1999 13:04 PM EDT (27-Oct-1999 1704 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .