Title: Corruption in the Water Sector
1Corruption in the Water Sector
- Janelle Plummer
- Patrik Stålgren
- Piers Cross
- World Water Week - Stockholm
- 22 August 2006
2The Challenge
- Inefficient use of existing water sector finances
- Lack of investment
- Millions dying from lack of clean water and basic
sanitation Reaching the MDGs is unlikely - Degradation of water resources and ecosystems
- Unjust distribution of water services and
resources - Lack of democratic influence for stakeholders
- Corruption affects who gets what water when,
where and how. It determines how costs are
distributed between different actors and the
environment.
3How big is the corruption problem?
- Varies across the sector and
- national/sub-national governance
- settings
- World Bank estimates of project
- corruption in highly corrupt countries
- could be 30-40 prior to anti-corruption
- initiative
- If 30 is correct
- US20 billion could be lost in the
- next decade to meet the MDGs
- for WSS in Africa
- Much need for diagnostics!
- Based on a 6.7 US billion annual estimate for
WSS expenditure requirements
- WSS in South Asia
- False readings 41 of customers had paid a
bribe in last 6 months - Illegal connections 20 of households admitted
paying a bribe to utility staff - Contractors 15 excess cost because of
collusion - Kickbacks 6-11 of contracts value
- (Davis,WSP Study, 2003)
4What is corruption?
-
- Definitions
- the use of public office for private gain (WB)
- the abuse of entrusted power for private gain
(TI)
5Corruption comes in many forms
- Bribes payments to public officials to persuade
themto do something (quicker, smoother or more
favorably). - Collusion secret agreement between contractors
to increase profit margin - Fraud falsification of records, invoices etc.
- Extortion use of coercion or threats. E.g. a
payment to secure / protect ongoing service
(cf. collusive corruption where both sides
benefit) - Favoritism/Nepotism in allocation of public
office - Grand corruption high level, political
corruption - Petty corruption corruption in public
administration and/or during implementation or
continuing operation and maintenance
6Examples of corruption in the water sector
- Falsified meter readings
- Distorted site selection of boreholes or
abstraction points - Collusion and favouritism in public procurement
- Bribes to cover up wastewater and pollution
discharge - Kickbacks to accept inflated bills in production
- Nepotism in allocation of public offices in water
administration - Bribes for diversion of water for irrigation
- Bribes for preferential treatment (spead, service
level etc)
7Causes of corruption in the water sector
- Complementing perspectives
- Incentives Cost/benefit ratio of engaging in
corruption. Economic and non-economic rewards. -
- Institutions Dysfunctional institutions -
stucture and capacity creates opportunity and
lowers risk of getting caught. -
- Norms Setting expectations and limitations for
legitimate behaviour.
8Causes of corruption
Corruption Monopoly Discretion
Accountability
HIGH
HIGH
LOW
9Is the water sector unique?
- It combines high risk characteristics
- Monopolistic behavior
- Large flow of PUBLIC money
- High cost of sector assets
- Assymmetry of power and information
- Sector/ technical complexity
- It is similar to
- Typical civil service behavior
-
- The construction industry (most corrupt sector?)
102. A Framework for Understanding Corruption in
the Water Sector
11An Interaction Framework
- Public to public
- Diversion of resources
- Appointments and transfers
- Embezzlement and fraud in planning and budgeting
- Public to private
- Procurement collusion, fraud, bribery
- Construction fraud and bribery
- Public to citizen / consumer
- Illegal connections
- Falsifying bills and meters
12An Interaction Framework
- PUBLIC
- PRIVATE
- interactions
-
- PUBLIC
- CONSUMER
- interactions
- PUBLIC
- PUBLIC
- interactions
Policy-making
Planning / budgeting / financing
Management
Tendering and Procurement
Construction / Operations / Services
Payment Systems
13An Interaction Framework
- PUBLIC
- PRIVATE
- interactions
-
- PUBLIC
- CONSUMER
- interactions
- PUBLIC
- PUBLIC
- interactions
Policy-making
Planning / budgeting / financing
Management
Tendering and Procurement
Construction / Operations Services
Payment Systems
14 PUBLIC PRIVATE interactions
PUBLIC CONSUMER interactions
PUBLIC PUBLIC interactions
- Distortions and diversion of national budgets
- State Capture of policy and regulatory
frameworks
-
- Bribery, fraud, collusion in tenders
- Fraud / bribes in construction
-
- Illegal connections
- Speed bribes
- Billing/payment bribes
-
- Administrative fraud
- Document falsification
- bribery / fraud in community procurement
- elite capture
15 PUBLIC to PUBLIC interactions
- Early warning indicators
- Monopolies / tariff abnormalities
- Lack of clarity of regulator / provider roles
- Embezzlement in budgeting, planning, fiscal
transfers - Speed / complexity of budget processes
- No.of signatures
- spending on capital intensive spending
- Unqualified senior staff
- Low salaries, high perks, cf. HH assets
- Increase in price of informal water
- Anti-corruption Measures
- Policy and tariff reform
- Separation
- Transparent minimum standards
- Independent auditing
- Citizen oversight and monitoring
- Technical auditing
- Participatory planning and budgeting
- Performance based staff reforms
- Transparent, competitive appointments
- Policy-making / Regulating
- Diversion of funds
- Distortions in decision-making, policy-making
- Planning and budgeting
- Corruption in planning and management
- Bribery and kickbacks in fiscal transfers
- Management and Program Design
- Appointments, transfers
- Preferred candidates
- Selection of projects
16- PUBLIC to
- PRIVATE
- interactions
- Early warning indicators
- Same tender lists
- Bidders drop out
- Higher unit costs
- Variation orders
- Low worker payments
- Single source supply
- Change in quality and coverage
- Anti-corruption Measures
- Simplify tender documents
- Bidding transparency
- Independent tender evaluation
- Integrity pacts
- Citizen oversight and monitoring
- Technical auditing
- Citizen auditing, public hearings
- Benchmarking
- SSIP support mechs
- Procurement
- Bribery, fraud, collusion in tenders
- Construction
- Fraud / bribes in construction
- Operations
- Fraud / bribes in construction
17-
- PUBLIC to CONSUMER
- interactions
- Anti-corruption Measures
- Corruption assessments
- Citizen monitoring and oversight
- Report cards
- Transparency in reporting
- Citizen oversight and monitoring
- Complaint redressal
- Reform to customer interface (e.g. women cashiers)
- Early warning indicators
- Loss of materials
- Infrastructure
- failure
- Low rate of faults
- Lack of interest in connection campaigns
- Night time tanking
- Unexplained variations in revenues
- Construction
- Community based WSS theft of materials
- Fraudulent documents
- Illegal connections
- access / speed payments
- billing / payment bribery
- Operations
- Admin corruption
- (access, service, speed)
-
- meter, billing and collection fraud and
bribery -
18Identifying anti-corruption measures
- 7 sets of anti-corruption measures
- Measuring and diagnosing
- Transparency and access to information
- Improving accountability
- Institutional and policy reform
- Enforcement and regulation
- Education and advocacy
- Integrity
19Areas to explore
- What is the viability of specific sector
interventions? - How can decentralization be harnessed as an
anti-corruption strategy? - How are these measures different from current
reform efforts? - How do we make anti-corruption work for the poor?
203. Making Anti-Corruption Approaches Work for
the Poor
21Making anti-corruption work for the poor
- Why pro-poor anti-corruption approaches?
- Understanding the poors interaction with
corruption - Identifying hotspots in the water sector
- Developing responses to bring benefit to the poor
22Why pro-poor anti-corruption approaches?
- Why pro-poor?
- disproportionate impact regressive
- differentiated impact the affect on the poor
varies - unpredictable impact not much is known
- Loss of water assets and services diversion
- User pays and cost recovery principles double
cost - Risk of fallback tightening and shifting
effects? - Growth, efficiency of services, better
governanceall these things support poverty
reduction
23Understanding the poors interaction with
corruption
- What are the impacts of corruption on the poor?
- Short term issues access to water
- Differentiated Marginalisation or empowering
- Coping strategies
- Bribery decreases financial assets but increases
short term water assets, health assets - Long term issues efficiency and effectiveness
- Marginalisation
- Decrease in physical assets
- Loss of options
24Understanding the poors interaction with
corruption
- 1. Indirect (does not involve the poor in
interaction) - Political corruption, state capture
- Diversion and distortion in the allocation of
funds - Embezzlement from state, sector, local government
budgets - Procurement fraud, fraud in construction
- Elite capture
25Understanding the poors interaction with
corruption
- 2. Direct (the poor are involved in the
interaction) - Poor users offer bribes or bribes are extorted
- to access water (for irrigation, drinking water
etc) - for quality, maintenance
- to get a fair price
- Poor officials use their public office for
private gain - To provide access, quality and price
- To enable elite capture
- To defraud program / project funds
- Act in organizational chain of fraud/ bribery
- or as an individual or middleman
-
26Identifying hotspots
- A flow of corrupt interactions
- in which the poor are paying bribes to stay in
the system - and receiving bribes (as officials or de-facto
officials) - which ones matter most?
27Identifying hotspots in the water sector
- In the poors water context what matters
most? - Paying bribes at the point of service delivery
- To access assets for WSS/irrigation/drainage
control (one-off) - To access ongoing services for repair /
operation (recurrent cost) - To get the right price for legal or illegal
aupply - Taking and extorting bribes and defrauding
projects either individually or as a part
of a group - Assets captured, controlled by officials
- Services and Payment systems controlled by
officials - Procurement and execution controlled by officials
- Embezzlement of project and community funds
28Identifying hotspots in the water sector
- In the poors water context what matters
most? - The sub-sector WRM, water supply, sanitation
- What characteristics make for more corruption?
- The public good finding
- The system
- Where do the poor get their water? The spectrum
of water providers - The location
- Opportunities for corruption at low access points
- The actors
- Relationships between poor and leaders / social
elite
29(No Transcript)