But Imran Khan will not be aware of Transparency International report because he doesn't read newspapers. Ask Siddique Jaan to never discuss Transparency International report on his YouTube video and Imran Khan will never find out about this report. Imran Khan and PTI supporters only watch Siddique Jaan YouTube videos.
Yes, Siraj knows more than this Harvard law professor and an expert on anticorruption:
Second, and perhaps more important, anticorruption efforts take time to be effective, and it would be a mistake to write them off as a failure just because they don’t produce an immediate, detectable improvement in a country’s CPI score. I know TI means well here–they want to emphasize the seriousness of the problem and the urgency of devoting more energy and resources to combating corruption. But as we’ve noted on this blog previously (see, for example, here and here), interpreting a lack of change in the CPI as evidence that anticorruption efforts aren’t working can be counterproductive: They can be demoralizing, and breed more cynicism and fatalism, attitudes which themselves make corruption harder to control. Now, if the CPI data really did show conclusively that anticorruption efforts aren’t working, then the fact that spreading that message might have demoralizing effects might not be a good argument for suppressing or downplaying this truth. But since a lack of statistically significant changes in the CPI data does not clearly show that anticorruption efforts have “stalled,” putting this spin on the data is a rhetorical choice, and I fear a misguided one.
Today, Transparency International released its new Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) for 2018. At some point, hopefully soon, I’ll have time to look closely at the new data and accompanying …
globalanticorruptionblog.com