Every year, the group Transparency International releases its Corruption Perception Index, which measures the perception of corruption – misuse of public resources, bribery, and backdoor deals, to name a few – in countries worldwide. On a scale of 0 (most corrupt) to 10 (least corrupt), no country scores a 10 and more than two-thirds of the 183 countries on the index score below a 5. The US comes in at 7.1. The index is built using data from surveys examining enforcement of anticorruption laws, tracking of public funds, kickbacks in government contracts, etc.
The eurozone
A man checks stock indexes on a screen of a bank in Milan, Italy, Monday.
Greece, which registers debt that tops 160 percent of GDP, scores a 3.4. Italy, where former leader Silvio Berlusconi remained a powerful political figure for decades despite accusations of corruption (including bribery and cooperating with the mafia), scored a 3.9.
At the other end of the spectrum, The Netherlands scored an 8.9 and Germany an 8.

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