India’s Corruption Challenge – Insights from Corruption Perceptions Index 2025

Context:
The Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) 2025 shows India’s stagnant score of 39, reflecting persistent governance challenges despite economic growth.

Key Highlights:

  • CPI 2025 Findings
  • Global average score: 42/100 (declining trend).
  • India’s score: 39/100
  • Rank: 91 out of 182 countries
  • Economic Impact of Corruption
  • Estimated cost: 0.5%–1.5% of GDP annually.
  • Leads to resource diversion and inefficiency.
  • Governance and Regulatory Issues
  • Over 26,000 imprisonment provisions in business laws → complex compliance.
  • Encourages rent-seeking and bureaucratic discretion.
  • Positive Developments
  • Digital initiatives reducing corruption:
    • Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) → minimizes leakages
    • GST → improves traceability
    • RBI Digital Payments Index (516.76 in Sep 2025)
  • Institutional Concerns
  • Weakness in transparency, accountability, and institutional independence.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) → released by Transparency International.
  • Measures perceived public sector corruption (score: 0–100).
  • DBT (Direct Benefit Transfer): Direct subsidy transfer to bank accounts.
  • GST: Indirect tax promoting formalization and compliance tracking.
  • RBI Digital Payments Index: Measures digital payment adoption.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Governance and Economic Growth
  • Corruption increases:
    • Transaction costs
    • Policy uncertainty
    • Investment risks
  • Hampers India’s ambition of becoming a $10 trillion economy.
  • Institutional Weaknesses
  • Need for stronger:
    • Anti-corruption agencies
    • Judicial efficiency
    • Regulatory transparency
  • Role of Technology
  • Digital governance reduces:
    • Human discretion
    • Leakages in welfare
  • However, requires data security and inclusivity safeguards.
  • Ethical Dimensions
  • Corruption reflects erosion of public trust and administrative ethics.
  • Impacts equity and social justice.
  • Way Forward
  • Simplify regulatory framework and reduce compliance burden.
  • Strengthen institutional independence (CVC, CBI, Lokpal).
  • Promote e-governance and transparency tools.
  • Encourage ethical governance and accountability culture.

UPSC Relevance:
• GS 2: Governance – Transparency, accountability, institutions
• GS 3: Economy – Investment climate, growth challenges
• GS 4: Ethics – Integrity, corruption issues

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