THE CONVERSATION
Canada needs to move beyond poorly enforced bribery laws and tackle corruption鈥檚 root聽causes
November 17, 2023
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Canada鈥檚 enforcement of laws against foreign bribery is weak, according to (OECD).
A working group from the OECD has found that, in the nearly 25 years since Canada passed the and , only two people have been convicted of foreign bribery and four companies have been sanctioned.
Corruption is a serious issue and a very costly threat to Canada鈥檚 foreign trade and international reputation. Although there are no reliable statistics on the exact amounts lost to global corruption, . The OECD said Canada must do more to deter foreign bribery and other corruption offences.
Our recent research sheds light on both Canada鈥檚 slow rate of progress in combating corruption and the OECD鈥檚 failure to get to the root causes of corruption.
SNC-Lavalin controversy
In the past, Canada has had difficulty passing and enforcing laws against powerful multinational corporations. Nowhere is this more clear than in the SNC-Lavalin controversy.
In 2018, Parliament in a budget bill. These agreements offer a new way to settle criminal charges for crimes like corruption. Unlike plea bargains, they provide a means to resolve cases without convictions. This mitigates the negative effects on those not involved in crime, like employees and pensioners, while still imposing consequences.
Remediation agreements attracted little attention until news broke that Kathleen Roussel, the head of the Public Prosecution Service of Canada, in 2018.
SNC-Lavalin had hoped to use a remediation agreement to settle criminal charges relating to a in obtaining government contracts in Libya. It made no secret of being unhappy with the decision of prosecutors, .
A few months later, another political scandal erupted when the media reported Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his staff had , leading to Wilson-Raybould鈥檚 resignation. It was later determined .
The state of affairs
In 2022, we conducted a survey asking how lawyers, consultants, government officials and academics felt about the state of anti-corruption laws in Canada. We asked their opinions on what corruption is, what acts are most serious, what countries are most corrupt and what remedies they would recommend.
The majority of participants accepted the standard legal definition of corruption, which involves bribery offered by a private agent to a public official.
While acknowledging the existence of corruption in Canada, participants believed it was most severe and widespread in non-western or developing nations, and less prevalent among fellow middle-class professionals. While toxic corporate cultures were identified as contributing to corruption, weak individuals were seen as the primary issue rather than built-in incentives to maximize profit.
They all criticized the federal government鈥檚 enforcement record but saw the introduction of the as promising if enforced. This registry requires companies to reveal the true owners behind shell companies.
One corruption professional said:
鈥淭here is no central government agency that is responsible to co-ordinate corruption at the federal level. It is a patchwork or Swiss cheese [model] with lots of holes in it. The federal government needs鈥o develop a national anti-corruption policy.鈥
Another corruption professional said:
鈥淪entences are not enforced and the criminal system is not up to date to deal with long and complex corruption cases鈥olice agencies must possess sufficient tools to battle corruption in an efficient manner.鈥
These findings reflect what we already know. Laws that sanction the crimes of the powerful are often poorly drafted and there are insufficient resources to ensure proper enforcement. Too many are willing to break the rules because they know governments will do little about it.
Neoliberalism and corruption
Our findings reveal that current anti-corruption efforts and debates often mask the role globalization plays in enabling corporate misconduct. The prevailing belief is that minimal government regulation is a good thing, as exemplified by that dictates if a new regulation is introduced, an existing one must be removed.
The role globalization plays in corruption, which originally led to demands for new laws in the first place, often gets lost in endless technocratic discussions about what laws are most effective for catching corporate cheats. This includes the OECD鈥檚 convention and their evaluations of Canada鈥檚 anti-bribery efforts.
In the 1980s, swept through capitalist nations worldwide. Their central message was that maximum efficiency and productivity required that corporations be freed from government interference.
What followed was a period of unchecked globalization and massive privatization of public sector operations. Regulations were removed, regulatory agencies were downsized and funding was cut. Tariffs and currency restrictions were jettisoned, allowing corporations to expand their operations globally.
The surge in globalized free trade created mammoth increases in corporate wealth, size and power, and corresponding increases in inequality within and across nations. Many transnational corporations now have .
Lasting effects of deregulation
The . The destruction of regulation, regulatory agencies and regulatory agents through downsizing, defunding and deregulation removed many of those responsible for passing and enforcing laws punishing corporate wrongdoing. While deregulation in the United States in 1980, Donald Trump carried it to an extreme.
While successive Canadian governments have never directly copied their U.S. counterparts, we, too, have witnessed the .
Because multinational corporations have been allowed to grow so large and powerful, and are now so central to our economic and cultural lives, governments lack the ability to curb or punish their unlawful acts. As the SNC-Lavalin debacle illustrated, our governments frequently lack the motivation to do so as well.
Given all this, serious action against corruption, in Canada and abroad, must include moving beyond the narrow and reactive confines of bribery law and policy, as espoused by the OECD and woefully mishandled by the Canadian government, to confront the harms associated with globalization and bring multinational corporations under democratic control.
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, Professor Emerita, Department of Sociology, ; , Associate Professor & Vice-Dean Research, Civil Law Section, Faculty of Law, ; , Professor of Criminology, , and , Professor, Department of Criminology,
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The Conversation is seeking new academic contributors. Researchers wishing to write articles should contact Melinda Knox, Director, Thought Leadership and Strategic Initiatives, at knoxm@queensu.ca.