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Stateowned Enterprises And Corruption What Are The Risks And What Can Be Done Oecd

  • SKU: BELL-7239116
Stateowned Enterprises And Corruption What Are The Risks And What Can Be Done Oecd
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Stateowned Enterprises And Corruption What Are The Risks And What Can Be Done Oecd instant download after payment.

Publisher: OECD Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.56 MB
Pages: 145
Author: OECD
ISBN: 9789264303058, 9789264305694, 9789264305700, 9264303057, 9264305696, 926430570X
Language: English
Year: 2018

Product desciption

Stateowned Enterprises And Corruption What Are The Risks And What Can Be Done Oecd by Oecd 9789264303058, 9789264305694, 9789264305700, 9264303057, 9264305696, 926430570X instant download after payment.

State-owned enterprises (SOEs) are a main conduit for states to exercise their role as economic actors. The benefits of SOE ownership are economic, political and social. So too are the costs of any mismanagement or abuse. Today, SOEs account for 22% of the world’s largest companies and are often concentrated in sectors with strategic importance for the state and society, including for development. More and more, SOEs operate like
similar private firms, increasingly active internationally and accounting for a greater market share.
The more pronounced presence of SOEs in the global marketplace has been marked by certain high-profile scandals and occasional evidence of a susceptibility of SOEs to corruption. This raises questions about what might make SOEs susceptible to corruption and how policy makers can act to maximise SOE productivity by raising their integrity.
The report answers these questions in two ways:
- Through an analysis of the perceptions and recent experiences of 347 high-level SOE officials and board members.
- Through a review of legal frameworks and approaches at the state level as reported by representatives of 28 national state-ownership agencies or ministries.
Together, the two surveys span 37 OECD and non-OECD countries. They focus on both the most severe forms of corruption, such as bribery, and on other rule-breaking and irregular practices that are harmful in their own right and that may be representative of both corporate and public governance gaps.

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