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Transparency Index (%) 2021

The Transparency Index score represented as a percentage.

Indicator Factsheet
Theme Transparency
Component Government Transparency
Dataset Transparency Index
NameTransparency Index (%)
DescriptionThe Transparency Index score represented as a percentage.
Methodology
snapshot
The T-Index defines transparency as the availability and accessibility (cost-free) of minimal public information required to deter corruption and enable accountability. It focuses on 14 de facto components and 6 de jure components, including: -De facto components: Online publication of public expenditures, procurement data, land cadasters, company registers, court rulings, financial disclosures, donor funds, mining concessions, and more. -De jure components: Ratification of international anti-corruption agreements (e.g., UNCAC), membership in the Open Government Partnership (OGP), and legal commitments to beneficial ownership registers. The T-Index uses a qualitative aggregation method, where each component contributes equally to a maximum score of 20 points (14 for de facto, 6 for de jure). A country’s score represents the percentage of transparency targets fulfilled, offering a clear benchmark for improvement. By combining these elements, the T-Index provides a comprehensive, actionable measure of transparency that can inform policy reforms and academic research.
ScaleLow transparency to High transparency
Note: For this indicator, max values are better.
Methodology https://corruptionrisk.org/t-index-methodology/
Attribution Alina Mungiu-Pippidi (2022) "Transparency and Corruption: Measuring real transparency by a new index" Regulation and Governance. DOI: 10.1111/rego.1251


Other Indicators of the Government Transparency component

Transparency Index (Total Score)

The T-Index provides a score that measures the real (de facto) and legal (de jure) transparency of governments. It evaluates the availability, accessibility, and comprehensiveness of key public information required to deter corruption.