Product category:
Building Trade Associations and Institutes
News Release from: Chartered Institute of Building [CIOB] | Subject: How corrupt is UK construction
Edited by the Buildingtalk Editorial
Team on 18 October 2006
CIOB ask 'How corrupt is UK
construction?'
51% of UK construction professionals felt that corruption is commonplace within the UK construction industry according to a survey by the Chartered Institute of Building.
How Corrupt is UK Construction? 51% of UK construction professionals felt that corruption is commonplace within the UK construction industry according to a survey by the Chartered Institute of Building (CIOB)
This article was originally published on Buildingtalk on 12 Mar 2004 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
CIOB Commission Welcomes Graduate Recruit Upturn
Applications to join building courses up to mid-January had risen by 16 per cent. Civil engineering courses are up by 25 per cent and architecture by 15 per cent.
'Urban Renaissance' Held Back By Funding Obstacles
London Assembly has called upon the UK Government to show more determination in assisting public and private sector organisations to find new ways of funding large-scale regeneration projects.
The survey asked over 1400 construction professionals what type of corrupt practice was most commonly found, and examined attitudes of how corrupt they deemed a variety of practices to be.
The study also looked at the areas in which respondents felt that corrupt practice was most likely to occur.
82% of respondent's were managers or directors; 57% worked in large companies, 20% were employed in medium sized firms and 23% in small organisations.
76% of respondent's regarded the employment of illegal workers as widespread in UK construction; 60% felt that fraud within the industry was prevalent and 41% had been personally offered a bribe.
Michael Brown CIOB deputy chief executive said, "People define corruption in different ways.
What is corrupt to one person might be common practice or just 'how it's always been done' to another.
We wanted our research to take the temperature of UK construction and find out what the perception is from those that work within it and its scale.
"Whilst the majority of respondents recognised corrupt practices for what they were, there was a concerning level of people who thought, for example, that producing a fraudulent invoice was not corrupt or that using bribery to obtain a contract was also not a particularly corrupt practice.
We clearly have some way to go as an industry to make ethical construction the only construction".
The World Bank has estimated the cost of corruption to the global economy at US$1.5 trillion a year.
More specifically corruption in the Great British construction industry could cost anywhere up to £3 billion a year.
The total cost of corruption to the respondent's companies was estimated at £35 million per year.
• Chartered Institute of Building [CIOB]: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Buildingtalk email newsletter
• Buildingtalk Home Page

