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Transparency International has released its annual Corruption Perceptions Index, which ranks 175 countries on their levels of public sector corruption.

A statement released with the report indicated that a low score "is likely a sign of widespread bribery, lack of punishment for corruption and public institutions that don’t respond to citizens’ needs".

It is pointed out that while no countries score 0 (highly corrupt), there are also none scoring a perfect 100 (very clean).

Bribes and backroom deals don’t just steal resources from the most vulnerable – they undermine justice and economic development, and destroy public trust in government and leaders.

Transparency International

Britain scores 78 which takes it up to 14 on the list and overall the country has seen a steady improvement over the past two years (2012: 74, 2013: 76).

Of particular note are the developing BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) and MINT (Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey) economies which all boast a darker hue on the map - all scoring below 46.

Jose Ugaz, the chair of Transparency International, explained in a release with the report:

Fast-growing economies whose governments refuse to be transparent and tolerate corruption, create a culture of impunity in which corruption thrives.

Here are the 10 most corrupt... (followed by transparency scores)

1. Somalia 8

=1. North Korea 8

3. Sudan 11

4. Afghanistan 12

5. South Sudan 15

6. Iraq 16

7. Turkmenistan 17

8. Uzbekistan 18

=8. Libya 18

=8. Eritrea 18

And here are the 10 least corrupt countries...

1. Denmark 92

2. New Zealand 91

3. Finland 89

4. Sweden 87

5. Norway 86

=5. Switzerland 86

7. Singapore 84

8. Netherlands 83

9. Luxembourg 82