Nilgiri
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- Aug 4, 2015
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Surprised with SL. I always though SL was the least corrupt country in South Asia...India is at 79 with 40 points
Different levels of bureaucracy are weighted differently.
Most indices tend to weight high level bureaucracy (theory, legislation) more than they should compared to delivery level bureaucracy (action).
The latter bit, SL and southern Indian states have done quite well hence their overall better socio-economic development compared to region as a whole.
High level federal bureaucracy has seen some good progress overall in India recently so the corruption perception has improved....but in bulk of india, delivery still needs to be improved immensely....it is not really "perceived" so much because people have gotten used to it so much and whole industries have benefited from working with it etc.
SL high level corruption however should not be ignored and the trend* is overall not an encouraging thing to see....because having the top being bad will always have a bad ripple/trickle down effect through the whole structure....and cause even the more efficient lower level to become diseased over time if not addressed.
So overall thats why India does better in this index than SL. A number has to be dissected to understand where it comes from...rather than taken face value.
*India score has gotten better (larger the number is better...Denmark scores 90 and Somalia 10) from 36 in 2012 to 40 in 2016 (I would say mostly Modi admin based reforms)
In comparison SL has dropped worryingly from 40 in 2012 to 36 in 2016.
Pakistan also improved from 27 to 32 in this time period.
BD is stagnant at score of 26.
Nepal improved from 27 to 29.
Bhutan is an already high performer at 63 to 65 scorewise.
For comparison, China scores 40, USA scores 74 in 2016.
Biggest regional improvement has been in Myanmar increasing from 15 to 28.
@LA se Karachi @Aung Zaya
Couldn't agree more, wealth = higher education = problems/issues are dealt with effectively and efficiently.
Our literacy rates are no longer relevant to us, high literacy rates simply means one is able to read and write. This is no longer sufficient, we need higher broad-based education at the tertiary level.
Investment in education/human resources pays dividends like nothing else. It is so important.
Educated people will find their own healthcare through the private sector. It is more important than investment in healthcare or anything else
You and I are on same wavelength. Welcome aboard!
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