Greece, Italy Rank as Europe's Most Corrupt Countries
When you have terrible governments and awful laws, corruption might actually make the place tolerable
Greece is considered Europe's most corrupt country, ranking roughly on par with Colombia and Swaziland in an annual global survey of perceived corruption released Wednesday.
Transparency International, a corruption watchdog, ranked Greece 94th out of 176 countries in the 2012 corruption perceptions index, which surveys economic experts about the perceived level of public sector corruption. Last year, Greece ranked 80th.
Using a scale introduced for this year's report, Transparency International ranked the countries between zero, which is "highly corrupt," and 100, for "very clean." Two-thirds of the 176 countries surveyed scored below 50, including Italy and Greece from among the 17 members of the European Union that use the euro. Italy ranked 72nd.
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Having been in Italy recently, this isn't surprising. It seems that most transactions are best conducted with those whom you 'know'; things happen more quickly and with less difficulty that way.
Suffice to say what was 'written' was less important than what you could noddle at the time.
If you didn't know someone, you might have had to spend quite a bit of time waiting to see the David sculpture (and it would be worth the wait). Knowing someone meant, oh, a one minute wait.