Risk 7 of 10 · Crime

Systemic Corruption, Fraud, Unethical Conduct and Organised Crime Eroding Rule of Law, Safety and Security

Systemic corruption, fraud, and organised crime that erode the rule of law, undermine institutions, weaken delivery, and drive instability and declining confidence.

7 national rank (of 10)
9 risks it amplifies
19 chapters ranking it in their Top 10

Definition

Systemic corruption, fraud, and organised crime that erode the rule of law, undermine institutions, weaken delivery, and drive instability and declining confidence.

Opportunity

Strengthen anti-corruption controls, leverage technology for transparency, and rebuild ethical cultures across sectors.

OPPORTUNITY — as paired in the report

Why this risk matters

  • Corruption and organised crime divert resources, weaken institutions and normalise impunity.
  • They raise security, compliance and operating costs while undermining service delivery and public trust.
  • This risk blocks progress on many others by choking off reform, accountability and fair competition.

p50— see this page in the report

Storyline

Systemic corruption, fraud, unethical conduct and organised crime have become a profound cross‑cutting risk in Southern Africa, eroding the rule of law, safety and security, and undermining confidence in institutions and markets. Years of weak enforcement and oversight, politicisation and capture of key institutions, and limited consequences for high‑profile offenders have normalised unlawful behaviour and allowed entrenched patronage networks to shape how public resources are allocated and used. Lack of transparency in procurement and public spending, combined with under‑resourced and sometimes compromised law‑enforcement and prosecuting agencies, further weakens deterrence and enables sophisticated corruption schemes to proliferate.

In parallel, organised crime and illicit markets, from illegal mining and environmental crimes to extortion, drugs, cyber‑fraud and counterfeit goods, have expanded and increasingly intersect with corrupt networks in both the state and private sector. This “organised corruption” blurs the line between state capture, white‑collar crime and traditional organised crime, creating powerful vested interests opposed to reform and accountability. The impacts are severe, e.g. diversion and theft of public resources, weakened service‑delivery and infrastructure outcomes, elevated crime, violence and extortion risks for communities and businesses, higher security and compliance costs, reduced investment and tourism, and persistent civil unrest and emigration of taxpayers and skilled workers.

At a systemic level, ongoing corruption and organised crime erode institutional legitimacy and raise the risk of renewed international censure, making it significantly harder to restore trust, strengthen the rule of law and build a competitive, inclusive economy.

At a glance: Why this risk matters

Corruption and organised crime divert resources, weaken institutions and normalise impunity.

They raise security, compliance and operating costs while undermining service delivery and public trust.

This risk blocks progress on many others by choking off reform, accountability and fair competition.

Scenario outlook

Best-, medium- and worst-case scenarios for Systemic Corruption, Fraud, Unethical Conduct and Organised Crime Eroding Rule of Law, Safety and Security across each time horizon, verbatim from the report.
Time horizonBest CaseMedium CaseWorst Case
Short-term (1-2 years).High profile prosecutions succeed, anti-corruption institutions are strengthened, asset forfeiture is used, organised crime networks are disrupted, and an ethical culture emerges.Limited prosecutions, corruption persists, slow justice, crime continues, incremental improvements, public scepticism.State capture deepens, corruption becomes total, organised crime controls territory, there is a complete breakdown of the rule of law, and a narco-state scenario.
Medium-term (3-5 years).Corruption has been significantly reduced, a strict rule of law has been established, functional criminal justice has been restored, business confidence has been restored, and an ethical governance norm has been established.Endemic corruption persists, selective enforcement, ongoing state capture, normalised criminality, and a two tier justice system.Complete criminalisation of the state, organised crime dominates the economy, rule of law extinct, violence endemic, investor boycott.
Long-term (6-10 years).Integrity based society, corruption rare and punished, strong institutions, rule of law transparent governance, investment magnet.Corruption contained but not eliminated, imperfect rule of law, ongoing vigilance required, reputational damage persists.Failed state controlled by criminal networks, permanent lawlessness, economic collapse, humanitarian crisis, pariah status.

p50— see this page in the report Best / Medium / Worst case across short, medium and long-term horizons.

Interconnections

From the Part 1.4 influence matrix. Strength as printed: H high · M medium · L low.

Risks this risk influences

Risks influencing this risk

p54— see this page in the report

Sector & regional exposure

Chapters whose printed Top 10 impact grid ranks this risk. AVE RANK 1 = highest impact.

Compiled from each chapter’s “IRMSA Top 10 impact” grid (Parts 2–3); open a chapter page to see its source.

International view

Systemic corruption, fraud, unethical conduct and organised crime eroding rule of law, safety and security

Corruption, fraud, cyber-enabled crime, illicit trade and unethical conduct continue to erode trust in institutions and markets, especially across complex cross-border value chains. Organised crime increasingly intersects with cybercrime, intellectual property theft, supply chain infiltration, financial fraud, ransomware and human trafficking, demanding integrated responses across assurance functions.

p69— see this page in the report