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11 E. Eur. Const. Rev. 80 (2002)
Culture of Corruption or Accountability Deficit

handle is hein.journals/eeurcr11 and id is 340 raw text is: Culture of Corruption or Accountability Deficit?

Alina Mungiu-Pippidi

T        he European Commission's recent round of
reports, issued in 2002, monitoring would-be
Imembers of the EU identified corruption,
once again, as the most salient issue in every postcom-
munist country aspiring to membership. A report from
Open Society Institute, published in the fall of 2002,
also discusses the situation country by country, putting
full emphasis of its own on areas where the commission
routinely notes that sufficient progress has not been
achieved. The overall conclusion is gloomy: corruption
in future member countries continues to be rampant,
and the EU is not prepared to handle it. Furthermore,
the regional New Europe Barometer 2001 survey
shows that countries invited to join the EU in the first
wave, such as Lithuania or Slovakia, perceive their
administrations to be just a corrupt as those in coun-
tries that are lagging behind, such as Romania and
Bulgaria. From plan to clan or from nomenklatura to
kleptokratura to culture of corruption, there is no
shortage of catchy phrases depicting the various features
of corruption as a general phenomenon.'
But is corruption the problem here, in fact, or is
it singled out only for lack of a better word to explain
why, although the formal political criteria for accession
were fulfilled even in Romania and Bulgaria (countries
joining later, after 2007, primarily for economic
reasons), the informal realities trail far behind?
Corruption cannot be the right word to cover the
politicization of a state administration that functions
only when palms are greased; the partisanship of the
media, as a general rule; the blurred border between
politics and business; the apathy and inertia of law-and-
order agencies; the domination of the military and

secret services by Warsaw Pact-era officials; or the
cronyism plaguing entire societies-not just individual
nations' politics. Corruption, as a concept, does not
capture the failure of politicians in these societies to
construct a public-interest space, a failure that leaves
blatant partisan interests to reign over every aspect of
life, from privatization to the regulation of public
broadcasting. Most institutions of accountability simply
do not seem to perform as they do in Western coun-
tries.Why does this happen?
This article suggests possible answers to this ques-
tion, based on a survey completed by citizens of the
aspirant EU members, with a special focus on Slovakia
(to become a full member in 2004), Bulgaria, and
Romania (hopefully in 2007). These responses origi-
nated in an opinion poll concerning perceptions of
accountable government organized by the Romanian
Academic Society within a framework provided by a
Freedom House Regional Networking Program in
these three countries. The social situation, as under-
stood by all respondents, turned out to be fairly similar
in all three states, despite the cultural differences one
would expect to find (these three countries fall on
either side of Samuel Huntington's civilization line:
Slovakia is Catholic and a former Habsburg domimion;
Romania and Bulgaria are Orthodox and former
Ottoman provinces).
Corruption is commonly defined as the grease of
commerce. The evidence coming out of these surveys
is that it is the grease, not of business, but of public
service. Proof that business activities require more in
the way of bribes than any other activity is conspicu-
ously absent or may even point to the contrary.

80                                                                  EAST EUROPEAN CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW

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