Control of Corruption
Methodology
The control of corruption reflects perceptions of the extent to which public power is exercised for private gain, including both petty and grand forms of corruption, as well as "capture" of the state by elites and private interests. Score de performance de 0 à 100. The highest score reflects the best situation
Source: World Bank, Worldwide Governance Indicators 2014 (WGI).
Score
- Africa-
- Sub-Saharan Africa-
- Middle East and North Africa-
- Southern Africa-
- Central Africa-
- East Africa-
- West Africa-
- North Africa-
- Brazil-India-China (BIC)-
- Least Developped Countries (LDC)-
- No LDC-
- High income non OECD-
- Upper middle income countries-
- Lower middle income-
- Low income countries-
- Outsize the Franc zone-
- Franc CFA zone-
- WAMEU-
- CEMAC-
- Algeria-
- Angola-
- Benin-
- Botswana-
- Brazil-
- Burkina Faso-
- Burundi-
- Cameroon-
- Cape Verde-
- Central African Republic-
- Chad-
- China-
- Comoros-
- Congo, Dem. Rep.-
- Congo, Rep-
- Cote d'Ivoire-
- Djibouti-
- Egypt-
- Equatorial Guinea-
- Eritrea-
- Ethiopia-
- Gabon-
- Gambia-
- Ghana-
- Guinea-
- Guinea-Bissau-
- India-
- Kenya-
- Lesotho-
- Liberia-
- Libya-
- Madagascar-
- Malawi-
- Mali-
- Mauritania-
- Mauritius-
- Morocco-
- Mozambique-
- Namibia-
- Niger-
- Nigeria-
- Rwanda-
- Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic-
- Sao Tome and Principe-
- Senegal-
- Seychelles-
- Sierra Leone-
- Somalia-
- South Africa-
- South Sudan-
- Sudan-
- Swaziland-
- Tanzania-
- Togo-
- Tunisia-
- Uganda-
- Zambia-
- Zimbabwe-