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Presentation of the most important global ranking of countries by perception of corruption - CPI

Transparency Serbia invites you to attend the press conference

Presentation of the most important global ranking of countries by perception of corruption - CPI: Where is Serbia on the list?

On Tuesday, February 11, 2025, starting at 10 a.m., in the Media Center (Terazije 3, room on the second floor)

The results of the Corruption Perceptions Index for 2024, a comparison with previous years and other countries, as well as the main problems and priorities for the fight against corruption in Serbia for 2025, will be presented by:

- Bojana Medenica, Executive Director of Transparency Serbia

- Nemanja Nenadić, Program Director of Transparency Serbia

Moderated by: Zlata Đorđević, Transparency Serbia

All participants will receive full material on the research and priorities for the fight against corruption at the conference itself. Immediately before the start of the conference, the material will be posted on the TS website - www.transparentnost.org.rs, on the page dedicated to CPI.

The material and comments cannot be obtained earlier as they are under an embargo by Transparency International until February 11, 2025.

Simultaneous translation (English) will be provided at the conference, and key findings and recommendations will also be available in English.

 Presentation of the Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index for 2024

Will putting corruption in the focus of the public, after the tragedy in Novi Sad, bring changes and what steps are most crucial to take? What is the perception of the corruption of state officials and civil servants in Serbia by those who do business with them or who advise businessmen, governments and international institutions on this? How does Serbia compare to its neighbors? Which countries have made the most progress and which have seen a decline?

The answers to these questions are provided by the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), the most significant ranking of countries in terms of the perception of corruption in the public sector. For more than two decades, the research has been presented by the leading anti-corruption organization on a global level, Transparency International. The results and rankings for 2024 will be presented on February 11, 2025 in all branches of Transparency International around the world.

In addition to Serbia's results for 2024, Transparency Serbia will present a comparison with previous results and a comparison with the countries of the region. Let's take a look at what we think has influenced this year's index. More importantly, especially in the context of the ongoing mass anti-corruption protests after the tragedy in Novi Sad, we will present priorities for the fight against corruption. 

The 2024 table, which will be available at the conference, will rank 180 countries and territories, scoring on a scale from 100 (very clean) to 0 (very corrupt).

Last year, Serbia had an index of 36, while in the previous two surveys it had an index of 38. With such an index, Serbia is among the countries with widespread corruption.

It is important to note that the Corruption Perception Index does not represent statistics on convictions, criminal charges, indictments, does not measure the number of laws adopted, nor the number of cases of petty corruption that citizens encounter. Transparency International, based on its methodology, compiles the Corruption Perceptions Index as an "aggregate index", taking into account 13 relevant surveys that measure the perception of public sector corruption. These surveys represent the opinion or impression that those dealing with state officials and public servants or who advise businessmen, governments and international institutions have about the corruption of government officials and public servants. The respondents are mainly from abroad. Surveys must have been published within the last 24 months and there must be at least three such data sources for a country to be ranked. In the observed period, Serbia was observed in eight relevant surveys, which allows for a high level of reliability of the data.

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