Bureaucratic Perceptions of Fraud and Corruption in the Public Sector in KwaZulu-Natal
Date
2012-01-20
Authors
Xulu, S’busiso Babo
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Abstract
There is consensus among academic experts and researchers on corruption that
large scale construction and development programmes provide an excellent avenue
for corruption in corrupt regimes. The past ten years or so have witnessed a deluge
of media, especially print media, reporting on corruption in the South African state.
South Africa is a developmental state, and by definition government is heavily
involved in large scale acquisition of goods and services as well as in infrastructure
development programmes.
This research was conducted within this context and sought to explore perceptions
of and attitudes to fraud and corruption in the public sector. The research was
carried out in the province of KwaZulu-Natal with a sample of 75 public sector
bureaucrats in three government departments engaged in large scale procurement
of goods and services.
Results indicate that procurement constitutes a weak link in the quality chain of risk
management and therefore in fraud and corruption prevention strategies. Further,
the data shows dissatisfaction among officials with the way officialdom handles
malfeasance and profligacy in the public sector and particularly the failure in the
government system to enforce accountability.
Tentative recommendations include further research into the value system of
government officials, reducing the motivations for corruption in government spending
through training programmes in ethics and good corporate governance, enforcing
punitive measures, as well as establishing mechanisms for policing and early
warning signals
Description
MM thesis - P&DM
Keywords
Fraud, Corruption, Public sector, Malfeasance