Kazakstan: Corruption “Boosts Economy”
Survey suggests that many businessmen see bribes as an essential part of their day-to-day
activities.
Andrei Chebotaryov
Corruption now appears to be so rife in Kazakstan that the business
community views it as a useful way to boost the economy.
A recent survey by the polling organisation Komkon-2 suggests that two
out of three businessmen questioned said that graft was necessary for transitional
countries moving from a state-controlled to market economy.
Kazak businessmen - who have never known anything but a bureaucratic
system full of never-ending hurdles - now consider corruption as the only way to keep
their companies operating.
“If you follow all official rules, you will never be able to get
anything done,” said one young Almaty entrepreneur who gave his name as Nikolai Nazarov.
“It took almost five months to open my first shop. When the time came
to set up a second, I knew exactly what to do – make a deal with an official to smooth
the process over.”
Small businessman Talgat Arynbaev told IWPR that bribes help him and
his colleagues to solve problems quickly.
Arynbaev is required to complete as many as ten documents a month, from
tax declarations to rent agreements. This can involve standing in line for days on end to
get just one of the necessary signatures.
As a result, work can come to a standstill and serious losses are
inevitable - which is why many businessmen prefer to grease the palm of the relevant
officials to bring the process to an end in a matter of hours.
Viktor Yambaev, president of Almaty’s entrepreneurs association, told
IWPR that an army of government bureaucrats are living very comfortably as a result of
this.
He also alleged that such officials often bring in new regulations to
hamper business development in order to generate more opportunities for corruption.
Consequently, many businessmen are forced to bend or break the law to
ensure their own survival.
Sergei Zlotnikov, head of the non-governmental organisation
Transparency Kazakstan, told IWPR that an excessively bureaucratic system had forced
entrepreneurs to resort to illegal practices.
Aside from government agencies, the Komkon survey suggests that
corruption in law enforcement agencies, the judiciary and even universities is widespread.
Almaty undergraduate Maxim Evgrafov told IWPR that many of his fellow
students cover up their absence by bribing their teachers. Some do this so often that they
do not attend any lectures at all, and only turn up to sit their exams. At this stage, a
further bribe is usually enough to secure a pass mark.
Even well known figures such as President Nursultan Nazarbaev’s
daughter Dariga Nazarbaeva, who heads the board of the media holding agency Khabar, has
gone on record as saying that corruption is inevitable, if undesirable.
In an interview with the Russian magazine Ogonyok in May this year, she
is reported to have referred to a Western businessman who said that without graft there
would be no progress.
Nazarbaeva acknowledged that bribe-taking was widespread but pointed
out it was also evident in developed Western countries in more subtle forms.
In general, the government’s anti-corruption measures have proved
unsuccessful, with one important exception.
Last year, there was a temporary halt on tax inspectors and financial
police making unauthorised, random visits to companies, during which the former would
often pressure the latter into paying bribes. The initiative was so effective that it was
reintroduced for much of this year.
“They [the inspectors] can’t just drop by unless they have a
warrant or are investigating a complaint to the police, “ said Nazarov.
The prevalence of corruption in the Kazak economy has not stopped
western firms investing in the oil industry in the past decade. These are big players who
encounter fewer problems with petty officialdom than the local businessmen interviewed by
IWPR.
Kazakstan scores high marks with western firms which assess financial
risk for potential investors. Moody’s credit rating agency, for example, thinks
Kazakstan is a healthier investment prospect than Russia.
It has certainly proved more attractive than the other Central Asian
countries, with its relatively sound banking sector, and – thanks to oil – a growing
economy and manageable debts. And if it is corrupt, it is probably no worse than its
neighbours.
Andrei Chebotaryov is the editor of the magazine K Obshchestvu Bez
Korruptsii (Towards a Society Without Corruption).
IWPR, August 20, 2003
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