Tales of corruption in Nigeria are legion. And like many analysts of the country, Matthew Page has his favorites. There's the case of the clerk at the state examinations board who was called to account for the disappearance of $100,000 in exam fees. While news accounts of her explanations varied, according to some reports, "she claimed that a magical snake had slithered into the safe and eaten the money," chuckles Page, who spent more than a decade studying Nigeria as an intelligence officer for various U.S. agencies.

Then there's the mile-long "monorail to nowhere" in the city of Port Harcourt. A state governor poured $400 million into building it, says Page. Then, shortly before completion, his successor halted construction. "So, it's never run a single train."

Page's amusement at such stories is tempered by concern over the larger implications – a concern widely held among Nigerians themselves. Nigeria consistently scores near the top of an annual "Corruption Perception Index" put together by the watchdog group Transparency International. And Oluseun Onigbinde — the founder of a Nigerian nonprofit that tracks his government's spending — considers corruption "an existential threat" to his country. Nigeria, says Onigbinde, "has a huge treasure chest of oil wealth. And yet we have some of the worst socioeconomic indicators – things like maternal mortality rates – in the world."

Onigbinde is among the Nigerians trying to tackle the issue: His organization, called BudgIT, simplifies budgeting information on public projects so that citizens can monitor whether officials are spending the money as intended – and call them out if they don't.

But such reform efforts are complicated by the sheer pervasiveness of corruption in Nigeria, says Page, who is now a fellow at several think tanks including the London-based Chatham House. The practice takes so many forms and pervades so many aspects of life in Nigeria, he explains, it's hard to put together a full picture.

Now Page has proposed a way to do just that: A "taxonomy" tool that classifies each type of corruption according to the tactic employed (bribery, extortion, etc.) and the sector it's used in (agriculture, electoral politics, etc.). The result, arrived at in consultation with Nigerian experts and ordinary citizens and first published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, is a compendium of more than 500 distinct species of corruption in Nigeria.

NPR spoke with Page about what his taxonomy reveals and why it could be useful beyond Nigeria. (This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.)

Why he's doing this for Nigeria specifically

There is certainly no shortage of countries struggling with corruption, notes Page. "What I would love to see is if someone who worked in say, Uzbekistan or Brazil, saw this tool and adapted it," so other countries can be compared to Nigeria.

That said, says Page, among experts on corruption it's a widely held view that "Nigeria is definitely in the premiership league of corrupt countries."

"This is not because there is anything unique about Nigerians that make them more corrupt," he adds, but because of a "perfect storm" of circumstances. Nigeria's petroleum reserves mean "there's an enormous amount of money flowing into public coffers." Years of military rule prior to the return to democracy in 1999 "resulted in a hollowing out of public institutions." And there are more than 360 different ethnic groups in a nation where "the identity of being a Nigerian sometimes isn't as strong as your local identity."

The result, Page says: "There's this perception among officials in Nigeria] that national government is there to divide up the booty of oil wealth." And that political culture then filters through to layers below, to the point where even local police or school teachers or receptionists at public hospitals may consider it their right to demand bribes. "It's about people monetizing their position in society so that even people with the lowest amount of authority will use that to extract a small amount."

What he learned by putting this taxonomy

One benefit, says Page, is that the taxonomy has pointed up a number of significant areas of potential corruption that had been largely overlooked.

For instance, there's been a recent explosion in programs to help small businesses – essentially micro-grants and loans to help people in poverty launch or expand very small enterprises – selling phone cards in a market, say, or opening a hair-styling stall. "One thing that surprised me was the extent to which this has become a real black hole into which politicians can push money and really not have accountability in terms of how it's spent," says Page.

This doesn't mean that microfinance isn't helping people, he adds. But in a country like Nigeria the potential for theft is enormous. "You have politicians giving these small amounts – say $5,000 [divided up among] their constituents," he says. "No one really monitors the impact. It becomes just another form of patronage. So for me it's interesting that this trend in international development has been Nigeria-ized by local politicians — turned into something that fits into their usual bad habits and undermines the point of the aid."

Over the next year, says Page, he plans to hone in on small business grant programs to get a better sense of the extent of waste and corruption involved. "This has given me a road map for looking at the problem in greater depth."

Why he's included practices that are technically legal, such as high salaries for public officials and "white elephant" wasteful spending projects

Outside of Nigeria it may seem odd – and even controversial – to label such practices "corruption" says Page. But among both scholars of Nigeria and ordinary Nigerian citizens these practices "really resonate as a form of corruption."

"When so many Nigerians live on less than $2 a day, having legislators who are among the highest paid in the world – we're talking around $500,000 per year in salary and allowances [for many]– stands out as being excessive and essentially a form of corruption. It really jumps out at people as an abuse of office and a mechanism for self-enrichment."

Similarly, government projects whose financial benefit seems dubious are often simply avenues for the politicians controlling them to funnel jobs to cronies and arrange for kickbacks. "They're like gateway drugs into more recognizable forms of illicit corruption like contract fraud."

It's no accident, Page adds wryly, that Nigeria has no less than three separate space agencies. "Given Nigeria's many needs and challenges these agencies are obviously unwise and improper," he says. At best they are wasting public funds on civil servants without delivering much in the way of public goods. But at worse space programs are particularly ripe for corruption scams. "Because at the end of the day, unlike health or law enforcement or defense where there's a visible purpose to the spending, [spending on space projects] is out of sight and out of mind of most people."

Journalists share some of the blame.

"What's called 'brown envelope' journalism is a real problem," says Page. It refers to the practice of officials paying journalists or publications to run a story that is favorable to the official – or to give the journalists hush money in exchange for withholding an unfavorable piece.

"It's almost a form of entrepreneurialism among journalists who are poorly paid and operating in a media landscape that is crowded and very competitive," he says.

Page adds that the situation is nuanced. "I do know many of these journalists on a personal level and some are incredibly scrupulous." But he adds, it can be hard for them too. "If you're a journalist and you uncover embarrassing dirt on a politician – and it's a very target rich environment so there's a lot of dirt to be found on people in public life! – you could ... send it up to your editor. But then he could turn around and take money in exchange for quashing it."

In a similar vein, says Page, there are also corrupt civil society groups that take money in exchange for organizing public demonstrations that serve the payer's interest – say supporting a politician's plan, or protesting their opponent. "There's a lot of rent-a-crowd going on in Nigeria driven by politicians. They'll basically try to co-opt non-governmental organizations."

The solution to all this corruption — and how the taxonomy helps

There is no easy fix, says Page. And the solution to each specific corruption must be tailored to the situation. But he says identifying all the forms in detail is an important start. "I don't want to make exaggerated claims about how this can be the magic wand to solve things. But I felt that what was really holding us back was a sophisticated understanding of the problem. So this is about creating a road map for those tasked with coming up with solutions."

Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

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