Dear MEL Topic Readers,
The US slips to its lowest-ever rank in a global corruption index
CPI often refers to the Consumer Price Index, a key economic indicator,
but there is another CPI, the Corruption Perceptions Index. Assessed by experts
and business executives, this index ranks 182 countries and territories
worldwide by their perceived levels of public sector corruption. The index aims
to end the injustice of corruption by promoting transparency, accountability,
and integrity. The results are given on a scale of 0 (highly corrupt) to 100
(very clean). Of the 182 countries ranked in the 2025 CPI, the top scorers were
Denmark (89), Finland (88), Singapore (84), New Zealand (81), followed by five small
European countries, and mighty Germany (77) in 10th place. The global average
has fallen to a new low of 42, and more than two-thirds of countries score
below 50. The worst three scorers were South Sudan (9), Somalia (9), and
Venezuela (10). Under the Trump administration, the US scored its lowest CPI
score at 64 and ranked 29th on the list, tying with the Bahamas, but below Germany,
Canada, Japan, the UK, and France, the Western allies. What will the US’s score
be during the second, third, and the last year of the Trump administration?
Read the article and learn the 2025 CPI result.