A national crisis can have a wide range of effects on a country’s commitment to fighting corruption. Sometimes, the sense of crisis leads countries (for better or worse) to de-prioritize corruption, out of a sense that other matters are higher priority, or even out of a sense that tolerance for a certain degree of corruption is a price worth paying to achieve other more pressing objectives. But in other situations, a sense of national crisis can strengthen a government’s resolve to crack down aggressively on corruption. There seem to be at least two closely related reasons why this may sometimes occur. First, corruption might be seen as directly and significantly impeding the country’s ability to tackle the emergency at hand. Second, a time of crisis can strengthen the position of the nation’s chief executive (the president or prime minister)—both in the formal legal sense (in that during times of crisis the chief executive may be able to wield extraordinary emergency powers) and in the softer more political sense (in that the chief executive may enjoy a surge in popularity if the country is under threat, and the public perceives the chief executive as providing strong leadership in the crisis). If that chief executive is genuinely committed to fighting corruption (a big if), then he or she may be able to leverage this unusual power to move aggressively against corruption, in a manner that would be politically difficult or impossible in “normal” times.
My impression, based on news stories and informal conversations with actual experts (which I am not!), is that the latter characterization is more apt for what is happening in Ukraine right now. It was not obvious that things would go this way initially—particularly given that, shortly after Russia’s full-scale invasion, the Ukrainian parliament suspended the asset declaration requirement for public officials, which though justified at the time as a way to keep potentially sensitive information from the Russians, was viewed with understandable concern. But a series of developments since then has demonstrated what looks to an outsider (at least to this outsider) like a consistent and quite aggressive effort to crack down on corruption, even at the risk of some (temporary) disruption to aspects of the war effort.
At least for me, one of the most notable and encouraging signs was the arrest, earlier this month, of Ihor Kolomoisky, one of Ukraine’s most powerful oligarchs, on fraud charges. Continue reading