Post by account_disabled on Feb 25, 2024 0:27:16 GMT -6
least one in five has had to pay a bribe to the authority in their efforts to expedite procedures or obtain a license. Furthermore, in this country referring to the construction of public works is synonymous with mismanagement due to the requirements imposed by the authority, according to specialists during the Information forum in the fight against corruption. During the forum, organized by the National Institute of Transparency, Access to Information and Protection of Personal Data (Inai), the director of the Idea Foundation, Alberto Saracho, cited a study carried out by this organization in collaboration with the United Nations Program for Development (UNDP), which showed that at least 30 percent of companies have resorted to some corrupt practice not only with the public sector, but also with the private initiative, whether to sell products to a self-service chain or sell painting to a large real estate investor.
Saracho commented that excessive regulation encourages businesses to fall prey to different levels of government, where certain requirements may be required at the federal level. For this reason, one in five companies has bribed authorities to obtain licenses or expedite procedures. During the table called Business in Opacity, the general administrator of the Mexican Restaurant Association, Francisco Mijares, said: ''I want to tell you that the restaurant industry is made Bahamas Mobile Number List up of 515 thousand establishments nationwide; 95 percent are SMEs and none of us are free from corruption. ''For what reason? Because due to the excess of procedures to be able to truly open a restaurant, it is almost impossible to comply with them. We are talking about 117 procedures and at a state level we can go around 220 to 300, added to the federal requirements.'' He assured that they have demanded to make all the procedures transparent, because ''it makes us laugh because, as they say, the greater the regulation, the greater the corruption; "They want to regulate us so much that they force us to fall into corruption." The current head of the Mexican Chamber of the Construction Industry, Juan Paratores, also spoke, who noted: ''I am going to refer specifically to what is related to public works.
Indeed, in many cases it is synonymous with corruption and I think there are some things here that we have to evaluate." He pointed out that they have unsuccessfully demanded that various government bodies make the procedures in public works transparent. Not only the private sector mentioned the dimensions of corruption; The general administrator of Taxpayer Services, Guillermo Valls, said: ''What are the main barriers, in terms of corruption, that Mexicans have to face when opening a business? Corruption, as a phenomenon of social disagreement, is often generated by norms with excessive paperwork, with inefficient forms of development that turn them into dark, opaque norms.'' Finally, for the Secretary of Economic Development of the Government of Mexico City, Salomón Chertorivski Woldenberg, the phenomenon of corruption is the link between the private and public sectors that involves mutual distrust, so, even if there are good laws, Without trust there is no progress. ''The most painful part is where there is a business that is exposed, that is practically kidnapped by a public official in order to carry out its activity legally and in a simple manner. This is where we must act.
Saracho commented that excessive regulation encourages businesses to fall prey to different levels of government, where certain requirements may be required at the federal level. For this reason, one in five companies has bribed authorities to obtain licenses or expedite procedures. During the table called Business in Opacity, the general administrator of the Mexican Restaurant Association, Francisco Mijares, said: ''I want to tell you that the restaurant industry is made Bahamas Mobile Number List up of 515 thousand establishments nationwide; 95 percent are SMEs and none of us are free from corruption. ''For what reason? Because due to the excess of procedures to be able to truly open a restaurant, it is almost impossible to comply with them. We are talking about 117 procedures and at a state level we can go around 220 to 300, added to the federal requirements.'' He assured that they have demanded to make all the procedures transparent, because ''it makes us laugh because, as they say, the greater the regulation, the greater the corruption; "They want to regulate us so much that they force us to fall into corruption." The current head of the Mexican Chamber of the Construction Industry, Juan Paratores, also spoke, who noted: ''I am going to refer specifically to what is related to public works.
Indeed, in many cases it is synonymous with corruption and I think there are some things here that we have to evaluate." He pointed out that they have unsuccessfully demanded that various government bodies make the procedures in public works transparent. Not only the private sector mentioned the dimensions of corruption; The general administrator of Taxpayer Services, Guillermo Valls, said: ''What are the main barriers, in terms of corruption, that Mexicans have to face when opening a business? Corruption, as a phenomenon of social disagreement, is often generated by norms with excessive paperwork, with inefficient forms of development that turn them into dark, opaque norms.'' Finally, for the Secretary of Economic Development of the Government of Mexico City, Salomón Chertorivski Woldenberg, the phenomenon of corruption is the link between the private and public sectors that involves mutual distrust, so, even if there are good laws, Without trust there is no progress. ''The most painful part is where there is a business that is exposed, that is practically kidnapped by a public official in order to carry out its activity legally and in a simple manner. This is where we must act.