Skip to main content

Can blockchain help prevent gov’t corruption? WEF says yes



Blockchain can be a potent tool in preventing government corruption, leading to greater transparency, automation and auditability.

According to a report by the World Economic Forum, blockchain has a key role to play in improving governance, and in preventing corruption in a range of public administration settings.

In a post co-authored by Rachel Davidson Raycraft of the University of Virginia School of Law, Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy and Ashley Lannquist, Project Lead on, Blockchain and Distributed Ledger Technology at the World Economic Forum, the World Economic Forum set out five use cases for blockchain in keeping governments honest.

The public procurement use case could enable direct action on risk factors in procurement, with automated contracts and immutable records combining to deliver better, less corrupt procurement across government departments.

Land registration is becoming an increasingly popular use case for blockchain, allowing secure, publicly verifiable, permanent records of land ownership and title. Being written to the blockchain means records are less susceptible to tampering and manipulation.

The same extends to electronic voting conducted on the blockchain, which can reduce corruption and electoral fraud. By creating a permanent and transparent voting infrastructure, blockchain technology can increase electoral integrity and transparency for more effective results.

Beneficial corporate ownership is being monitored more keenly in countries worldwide in recent years, as a means of detecting fraud and illegal activity. By creating and storing records of corporate interests on a blockchain, authorities can maintain more effective records, while better identifying suspicious signals from the data.

Finally, the report says governments could use blockchain for handling the disbursement of grants, such as those in support of the arts, education and other social goods. Again, transparent, public records limit the scope for corruption and fraud, helping build faith in the grant awards model.

Five of many envisaged use cases, in practice governments around the world are already making the most of blockchain in improving transparency and efficiency of administration.

  • Blockchain offers a range of valuable qualities, particularly related to tamper-evident and permanent databases and record-keeping, that can help tackle government corruption.
  • This technology must be paired with thoughtful legal frameworks and structures. Blockchain alone cannot prevent crimes.

Blockchain can serve a unique role in preventing government corruption. Its technology offers a singular combination of permanent and tamper-evident record keeping, real-time transaction transparency and auditability, and automated smart contract functionality.

To be sure, blockchain alone cannot wholly prevent crimes or thwart bad actors. While blockchain can complement and enhance existing legal frameworks and social structures, its efficacy is only as great as the system in which it is a part. In the absence of consistent law enforcement, accurate informational inputs, adequate technological know-how, cooperative political elites, and societal good will, blockchain-based governance may prove no more a corruption deterrent than status quo laws and policies.

Nonetheless, key use cases demonstrate how the technology could be deployed to address weaknesses in current systems. These use cases also highlight the importance of a comprehensive and multi-faceted approach to blockchain-based governance. In many cases, they also include critical limitations and downsides to the use of this novel technology. While these limitations may recede with technological advancements, it is essential that governments weigh both the costs and the benefits of blockchain-based governance systems.

1. Public Procurement

Public procurement (or government contracting) is the single largest marketplace for government spending and the greatest source of official corruption worldwide. Various factors make this government process a hot bed of corruption in high-income and low-income countries alike. Vendor selection processes are complex and opaque, involving a high degree of human discretion. Not only do these vulnerabilities lead to massive financial waste, but they distort market prices, reduce healthy competition, and frequently result in substandard goods and ineffective services.

  • How blockchain can help: A blockchain-based process can directly address procurement’s corruption-risk factors by facilitating third-party oversight of tamper-evident transactions and enabling greater objectivity and uniformity through automated smart contracts, thus enhancing the transparency and accountability of transactions and actors.
  • Key limitations: A number of hurdles can complicate effective deployment. For example, the easier it is to access and use the blockchain platform, the more vulnerable it is to abuse. “Spamming” or “draining” attacks may cripple a system’s anti-corruption potential by flooding it with useless or malicious information or robbing it of the funds necessary to complete each transaction. Additionally, the blockchain platform may not capture the entire universe of relevant human interactions. If collusion, bribery, or even regular vendor selection continue to occur offline, the anti-corruption potential of blockchain-based procurement will be severely stunted.

2. Land Title Registries

Various governments have begun experimenting with blockchain-based land title registries. Some initiatives, like those in Sweden, are motivated by a desire to increase efficiency in a transaction-intensive industry. Others, such as those in Honduras and India, are intent on instilling and expanding property rights and enhancing transparency in a process vulnerable to corrupt practices.

  • How blockchain can help: Blockchain-based land registries can potentially provide a secure, decentralized, publicly verifiable, and immutable record system through which individuals could definitively prove their land rights. These qualities reduce the opportunity for self-interested manipulation of land rights and increase the resilience of land ownership more generally.
  • Key limitations: Blockchain technology itself cannot formalize property ownership or solve ineffective governance. Countries with nonexistent, incomplete, or incorrect land registries need to go through the difficult process of gathering, cleaning, and digitizing this information before a blockchain-based land title registry can function. Additionally, the degree of connectivity and tech savviness within a population may determine the feasibility of a blockchain-based land registry in the short-term.

3. Electronic Voting

Growing concern over election security, voter registration integrity, poll accessibility, and voter turnout has led governments to consider blockchain-based voting platforms as a means to increase faith and participation in essential democratic processes.

  • How blockchain can help: Blockchain’s decentralized, transparent, immutable, and encrypted qualities could potentially help minimize election tampering and maximize poll accessibility.
  • Key limitations: Given the high stakes of elections, electronic blockchain-based voting presents substantial risks. Any new technology systems, including those based on blockchain technologies, are vulnerable to cyber-attacks and other security vulnerabilities. These could cause vote manipulation, paper trail erasure, or electoral chaos. Furthermore, a voter verification system that uses biometric software, such as facial recognition, could lead to false positives or negatives in voter identification, thus facilitating fraud or disenfranchising citizens. Blockchain-based voting systems may also entail privacy risks and concerns. It is thus imperative that any such service be provided by an extremely vetted technology provider and system.

4. Beneficial Corporate Ownership Registries

Recent corruption scandals have raised concerns worldwide over opaque or undisclosed beneficial corporate ownership. Secretly operated companies can easily be used to launder money, pay bribes, or self-interestedly sway governmental investment.

  • How blockchain can help: Many countries are beginning to develop central registries for beneficial corporate ownership in order to better track conflicts of interest and criminal activity. Tamper-evident and broadly accessible blockchain-based registries could provide much needed transparency and disclosure.
  • Key limitations: Corporate ownership registries remain the exception and those which do exist overwhelmingly lack adequate verification systems. The recent emergence of beneficial corporate ownership registries combined with the novelty of blockchain technology may pose certain challenges to effective implementation. For example, most countries still do not require companies to maintain beneficial ownership information themselves. Furthermore, the adoption of a comprehensive and verifiable blockchain-based registry would require buy-in from politicians, lawyers, banks, and big business, many of whom may feel their interests are not served by the public transparency and auditability of such a system.

5. Grant Disbursements

Many governments annually disburse millions of dollars to support education, arts, humanitarian aid, and social assistance, amongst other causes. This process is frequently convoluted, opaque, and inefficient, which causes money to be lost to banking fees and middlemen and opens the potential for corrupt financial diversions.

  • How blockchain can help: Blockchain can potentially be used to build public trust in such systems. The ability to disintermediate and reduce the number of actors involved in grant awards, disbursements, and management could streamline the process, reduce costs, and minimize opportunities for illicit financial siphoning.
  • Key limitations: The ability for recipients to effectively manage blockchain-based grant disbursements may prove challenging or limit the depth of transparency. Less technologically savvy or well-resourced individuals and organizations may face discrimination or exclusion from grant disbursement processes if they are unable to use the system. Moreover, a blockchain-based disbursement system does not adequately address the challenge of corrupt practices in the use of the grant itself – an issue which frequently arises in the context of humanitarian aid.

Balancing benefits and challenges

In addition to the application-specific concerns, overarching technological barriers may stymie effective blockchain-based governance. These barriers could range from implementation cost and scalability, to unknown negative externalities and underinformed policy-makers.

"Blockchain presents valuable qualities, particularly related to tamper-evident and permanent databases and record-keeping, that could enhance transparency, accountability, and citizen engagement."

The World Economic Forum recently released a report to further assess blockchain’s ability to effectively reduce public corruption.

The report, Exploring Blockchain Technology for Government Transparency: A Blockchain-Based Public Procurement System, focuses on the Forum’s ongoing project with the Inter-American Development Bank and Colombian Inspector General’s Office, which has investigated, designed, and tested the use case of blockchain-based procurement. 

The proof-of-concept, centered around a public permissionless Ethereum blockchain-based procurement auction, highlighted the potential applicability of this technology in a variety of additional corruption-prone areas of public governance.

More blockchain use cases will continue to emerge to tackle bad actors. 

As they do, the novelty and untapped anti-corruption potential of blockchain-based solutions should not distract policymakers from the downsides and trade-offs associated with employing the technology in the public sphere. 

Nonetheless, blockchain presents valuable qualities, particularly related to tamper-evident and permanent databases and record-keeping, that could enhance transparency, accountability, and citizen engagement in areas that materially impact democratic governance and sustainable development around the world.

Source: coingeek.com & weforum.org

Comments

Contact us

Name

Email *

Message *

Popular posts from this blog

Cryptocurrencies Adding to the Safety and Security in the UK Gambling Industry

These are exciting times for the UK gambling industry. The impact of internet technology is now being felt with online gambling now controlling the industry.  The adoption of cutting-edge technology is reasonable for the boom in the industry. From live casinos, mobile apps to artificial intelligence, incredible trends continue shaping the gambling industry. However, it is the rise of cryptocurrency casinos that seeks to redefine UK gambling.  Many operators now include crypto coins such as bitcoin, Ethereum and Litecoin as part of their banking methods. Others offer exclusive bitcoin payments and promotions based on digital tokens. This revolutionary trend has a huge impact due to enhanced safety and security on these platforms. Players looking for peace of mind when playing online now opt to use cryptocurrencies. This post looks at how cryptos guarantee the safety and security of players at online casinos. How Cryptocurrency Gambling Works There’s a lot of talk about cryptocurrency,

Will Solana (SOL) Be the Shining Star of the Bull Market?

About 250,000 to 700,000 SOL have been sold daily by FTX for the last three weeks. SOL’s price jumped above $60, as GSOL’s premium also increased. While the price may retrace, it may not take long before SOL hits $70. Despite being a notable casualty of the FTX contagion in 2022, Solana (SOL) has defied all odds in 2023, as the price continues to outshine its peers. In the last 30 days, the value of SOL has increased by 180%, rising as high as $62 on November 11. However, the rising price of SOL is not the only interesting thing the token has shown by the token. For a token that was once described as dead, it has shown tremendous strength. Coin Edition came to this conclusion because of a post by trader Bluntz Capital. The Big Players Are Here According to Bluntz, FTX, after getting the go-ahead to liquidate its assets, has been selling around 250,000 to 700,000 daily for the last three weeks. Regardless of the sales, SOL has failed to nosedive. Rather, the price has chosen the upside

Terra Classic Community Passes Major Constructive Proposal, LUNC And USTC To $1?

  The Terra Luna Classic community has passed another key proposal as they prepare for a revival of Terra Luna Classic (LUNC) and repeg USTC stablecoin to $1.  The proposal aimed at having a guideline for a pay-per-job approach on the Terra Classic chain as core developer L1TF goes into maintenance mode for Q4. Meanwhile, the community is also collaborating on other fronts to keep LUNC and USTC above key support levels as traders started booking profits amid the latest pullback in the crypto market. Terra Luna Classic Passes Pay Per Job Proposal Proposal 11889 “Pay-per-job and governance-ruled Job List” has passed successfully. The proposal deemed the monthly model of roadmap and payment planning as suboptimal and plans to switch to a pay-per-job model. The proposal has received 91.99% “Yes” votes, with others mostly voting “Abstain”. The community believes it will optimize compensation structure, provide flexibility and transparency, boost community engagement, and risk mitigation. A