Index of Public Integrity
The Index of Public Integrity (IPI) is a comprehensive measure designed to assess the integrity and capacity of a country's public administration and institutions to prevent corruption and ensure good governance. The IPI focuses on the structural and institutional factors that contribute to or inhibit public integrity, providing a detailed look at the underlying conditions that facilitate or hinder corruption control. The IPI's score considers six components: judicial independence, budget transparency, administrative burden, trade openness, e-citizenship and press freedom. For more information about the IPI's methodology, please visit: http://corruptionrisk.org/ipi-methodology/
Indicators
admin_transp
Administrative Transparency
This indicator consists of the standardized sum of individual scores for relevant items in the de facto Transparency Index
e_citizen
E-Citizenship
Simple mean of standardized values of the percentage in populations of fixed broadband subscriptions, Internet users , and Facebook users
online_serv
Online Services
The score is based on the Online Services Index, integrated in the UN E-Government Development Index, which measures the scope and quality of online services
budg_transp
Budget Transparency
This Indicator represents the mean value of several questions from the Open Budget Survey, measuring transparency in the Executive’s Budget Proposal
jud_ind
Judicial Independence
This indicator captures judicial independence in a country, based on responses from the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Dataset
ipi
Index of Public Integrity
The IPI is based on 6 proxy indicators associated with constraints and opportunities of corruption