Corruption costs the world nearly $3trn a year. Here are some of the innovative ways in which communities, companies and countries are tackling it. Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: https://econ.st/2xvTKdy For more from Economist Films visit: http://films.economist.com/ Check out The Economist’s full video catalogue: http://econ.st/20IehQk Like The Economist on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheEconomist/ Follow The Economist on Twitter: https://twitter.com/theeconomist Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theeconomist/ Follow us on Medium: https://medium.com/@the_economist |
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21 comments
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Dan Hernandez
2020-10-05 at 21:56 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Dear Team Economist, Content and subject aside, the "background" music was quite a bit overdone to the point where it effectively drowned out the commentators and individuals being interviewed. Sound editing may need to be revisited. Like a DJ competing with a narrator. Otherwise, applause for the insight into this topic.
Mohamed Wafik Hamdi
2020-10-05 at 22:05 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Serious fraud office?? Is there a non-serious fraud office?
Thomas
2020-10-05 at 23:53 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Yes its called Hudson West III corp
Spinnetti
2020-10-05 at 22:06 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Can hardly hear the narration over the music…. surely you can mix that down?
blackstar 1010
2020-10-05 at 22:19 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Very Ez pz follows the money ,.money is the road to corruptions,.and ???
Dean J
2020-10-05 at 22:21 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
When people will dissolve their devalued identity aka inferiority complex so will all corruption and any other of its names will be dissolved by itself
Mike Baker
2020-10-05 at 22:42 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
I'd like to have this video republished with the audio fixed.
Laurent G
2020-10-05 at 23:03 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Fix the music pls
Rakeem WIlliams
2020-10-05 at 23:15 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Cops sell weapons to gangs; records get destroyed.
loveshahrukhforever
2020-10-05 at 23:42 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Wish there was no music in the background! So hard to focus
Keat HJ
2020-10-06 at 00:31 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Pretty sh*tty for the economist to talk about corruption when the US if f*cked.
Wahib Yusuf
2020-10-06 at 01:04 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
The way the music is engineered into the narrative is corrupting our ears – no pun intended 😉
John Hay
2020-10-06 at 01:29 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
I am South African and I’m so happy to finally see international, reputable media reporting on the corruption and crime in our country. Our people are being lied to and slaughtered on a daily basis. Thank you The Economist.
jayde M
2020-10-06 at 02:12 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Yesss to drugs
colin phang
2020-10-06 at 02:17 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Where is Malaysia? The biggest financial scandal in the world 1MDB led to the first conviction of a former prime minister in the country’s history
ovenlovesyou
2020-10-06 at 03:00 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Sometimes the music is too loud, drowning out the speaker. But otherwise a great video!
Mark Hackl
2020-10-06 at 03:10 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
The narrator is typically drown out be the background music.
Toto Mulono
2020-10-06 at 03:26 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Please Input Indonesia corruption by President Jokowi
Andrew Paterson
2020-10-06 at 03:31 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
Shut down the City of London and all the British Territories money laundering facilitators. These are the real criminals. They were pin striped suits. Also just put one London senior banker in prison for 20 years! They will soon get into line.
Matthew Lee
2020-10-06 at 03:59 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
We need to admit corruption is inevitable in every system with decision-maker being authorized with power. The objective is not to eradicate corruption, but to align the interests of decision-makers with the interests of the general public.
Galo Aguirre
2020-10-06 at 04:24 (UTC 2) Link to this comment
if you put a little animal in a cage against it's nature, it will do whatever it can to find a way out,
laws and regulations are like this, if there's a will there's a way to find loopholes and the means to cheat a system, no matter how well intentioned and thought-out.