(Press-News.org) A tool to help multinational companies assess the business bribery risks faced when conducting business in foreign countries and tailor compliance policies to address those threats has been created by researchers from the RAND Corporation and TRACE International.
Called the TRACE Matrix, the tool improves upon previous methods of risk assessment by incorporating approaches that are better designed to help businesses predict bribery risk and similar threats, researchers say. The tool is free and is available on the TRACE International website.
Researchers say corruption can hinder global business investment -- particularly in emerging markets -- but multinational companies often have difficulty assessing the business bribery risk in other countries.
"Expanding a business to a foreign country can be difficult and complicated," said Karlyn D. Stanley, who headed RAND's efforts to create the tool and an adjunct senior researcher at RAND, a nonprofit research organization. "The TRACE Matrix provides businesses with a new tool to assess the risk that government officials will attempt to secure bribes as a cost of doing business in that country."
Bribery of foreign government officials is prohibited by the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and other international laws. But businesses have inadequate measures to assess this risk on a country-specific basis.
In order to comply with the domestic laws, U.S. companies that engage in foreign markets create compliance programs that include training for employees who are present in foreign countries and audit programs of the company's foreign operations. This includes efforts to investigate the business credentials of vendors in those countries.
In the past 10 years, there has been an increase in prosecutions brought by the U.S. Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, said Nicholas Burger, co-author of the study and an economist at RAND.
To create the new index, researchers reviewed the literature on foreign business corruption, bribery of government officials, and government and corruption measurement. The RAND team also interviewed U.S. regulators, multinational companies, international consulting firms, international nonprofit organizations and global law firms to understand the processes corporations engage in to assess and address business bribery risk. TRACE International, which has more than 20 years of experience in dealing with business bribery risk, also contributed to the development of the index.
The TRACE Matrix calculates a score for each country, with a range from 1 to 100. The higher the score, the greater the business bribery risk. It assesses countries across four domains -- business interactions with government, anti-bribery laws and enforcement, government and civil service transparency, and the capacity for civil society oversight, including the role of the media. It also assesses countries in nine sub-domains.
Although the index can be used to rank countries by their composite scores, it is also possible to view the results for specific risk factors. This allows companies to tailor their compliance practices more effectively.
The 10 countries, in alphabetical order, with the highest business bribery risk score according to the TRACE Matrix are: Angola, Burundi, Cambodia, Chad, Guinea, Nigeria, South Sudan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, and Yemen. The 10 countries, in alphabetical order, with the lowest business bribery risk scores are Canada, Finland, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, Sweden, and the United States.
INFORMATION:
The report, "Business Bribery Risk Assessment," can be found at http://www.rand.org. Other authors include Elvira N. Loredo, Jeremy N.V. Miles and Clinton W. Saloga. The TRACE Matrix is available from TRACE International at http://www.traceinternational.org/trace-matrix/.
Research for the report was funded by TRACE International, and was conducted within the RAND Center for Corporate Ethics & Governance. The center is committed to improving public understanding of corporate ethics, law, and governance and to identify specific ways in which businesses can operate ethically, legally, and profitably. The center's work is supported by contributions from private-sector organizations and individuals with interests in research on these topics.
The RAND Corporation is a nonprofit institution that helps improve policy and decisionmaking through research and analysis. To sign up for RAND e-mail alerts: http://www.rand.org/newsletters.html
RAND is a registered trademark
CLEVELAND, Ohio (Monday, November 10, 2014)--After menopause and before age 65, women who have normal bone density have a very low risk of fracture, shows a new study from the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) published online in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society. That means these women don't need another bone mass density (BMD) test before age 65.
This study followed up 4,068 postmenopausal women ages 50 to 64 who had a BMD test, weren't taking hormones or calcium and vitamin D supplements in the trial, and didn't already have an osteoporotic ...
Research during the past 30 years has found many benefits of skin-to-skin contact between mothers and newborns immediately after birth, particularly with aiding breastfeeding. However, in some hospitals, skin-to-skin contact following cesarean birth is not implemented, due to practices around the surgery. A recent Quality Improvement (QI) project demonstrated that women's birth experiences were improved by implementing skin-to-skin contact after cesarean surgery.
Women who give birth by cesarean often have more difficulty with breastfeeding, and skin-to-skin contact can ...
Consumers place great faith in weight loss pills and remedies, buying and using them more than ever before. American obesity rates, however, are skyrocketing. According to a new study in the Journal of Public Policy & Marketing, false beliefs about these drugs are causing Americans to gain more weight.
"Weight management remedies that promise to reduce the risks of being overweight may undermine consumer motivation to engage in health-supportive behaviors," write authors Lisa E. Bolton (Pennsylvania State University), Amit Bhattacharjee (Dartmouth College) and Americus ...
Why do some chemical farmers resist a profitable conversion to organic methods? A new study in the Journal of Marketing suggests it may be because making that change feels like switching belief systems.
"The ideological map of American agriculture reveals an unfolding drama between chemical and organic farming," write authors Melea Press (University of Bath), Eric Arnould (Southern Denmark University), Jeff Murray (University of Arkansas) and Katherine Strand (McGill University). "Chemical farmers argue that to make money, one must follow chemical traditions; when organic ...
As obesity rates rise, health professionals and policy makers scramble to help consumers resist unhealthy eating choices, often focusing on better labeling and improved nutritional knowledge. According to a new study in the Journal of Marketing Research, however, training people to pay attention to their emotions is a far more powerful strategy.
"Consumers are often mindless," write authors Blair Kidwell (Ohio State University), Jonathan Hasford (Florida International University) and David M. Hardesty (University of Kentucky). "We not only demonstrate that emotional ...
The American obesity epidemic is out of control, and health advocates are working hard to ensure that food labels clearly list calorie content and all unhealthy ingredients. But according to a new study in the Journal of Marketing Research, labeling alone contributes little to healthier eating decisions unless the item also costs more.
"Obesity rates have more than doubled in the past two decades, and large-scale interventions are necessary to dissuade people from consuming unhealthy food," write authors Avni M. Shah (Duke University), James R. Bettman (Duke University), ...
Cities around the world are pouring money into beautiful bicycle paths in hopes of convincing citizens to drive less and bike more. According to a new study in the Journal of Public Policy & Marketing, however, getting people to go from four to two wheels isn't quite that simple.
"Although bicycling is a widely accepted way to travel around cities in Germany, Denmark, and the Netherlands," write authors Marius C. Claudy (University College, Dublin) and Mark Peterson (University of Wyoming), "it is still the most underutilized form of transportation in countries such as ...
Reserve's borders have erroneously moved 50 kilometers
New species, named after the Luama Katanga Reserve, is now threatened by cattle ranches and forest destruction
NEW YORK (November 11, 2014) - WCS scientists in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) have discovered a new species of plant living in a remote rift valley escarpment that's supposed to be inside of a protected area. But an administrative mapping error puts the reserve's borders some 50 kilometers west of the actual location. Now the new species, along with 900 other plant varieties and 1,400 chimpanzees, ...
For their study, the researchers were able to fall back on uninterrupted long-term temperature measurements of groundwater flows around the cities of Cologne and Karlsruhe, where the operators of the local waterworks have been measuring the temperature of the groundwater, which is largely uninfluenced by humans, for forty years. This is unique and a rare commodity for the researchers. "For us, the data was a godsend," stresses Peter Bayer, a senior assistant at ETH Zurich's Geological Institute. Even with some intensive research, they would not have been able to find a ...
Many businesses now offer customers the opportunity to make charitable donations to good causes along with their purchases, but does this really encourage the customer to buy more? According to a new study in the Journal of Marketing, the answer is a firm "Yes."
"The mere presence of a charitable donation opportunity can generate significantly more sales," write authors Michelle Andrews (Temple University), Xueming Luo (Temple University), Zheng Fang (Sichuan University) and Jaakko Aspara (Hanken Swedish School of Economics). "Offering the donation nearly doubled the ...