Technical

Tackling bribery and corruption in construction supply chains

Ahead of International Anti-Corruption Day on 9 December, Alex Minett discusses the importance of having adequate procedures in place to prevent bribery and corruption in construction supply chains.

Transparency International, the global coalition against corruption, defines corruption as the abuse of entrusted power for private gain. It can be grand, petty, bureaucratic, commercial or political. Meanwhile bribery, which is a form of corruption, takes many different forms, including money, gifts, donations and favours.

On a national level bribery and corruption stifle economic growth, hamper equality and erode trust. On a corporate level, businesses caught in a corruption scandal can incur fines, suffer business losses and experience long-lasting reputational damage. Meanwhile employees, shareholders and investors are likely to rapidly lose faith in an organisation embroiled in bribery.

Several factors make the construction industry vulnerable to bribery: the scale of projects provides opportunities to inflate costs and hide bribes while complex networks of sub-contractors perpetuate this risk.

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