Survey Shows 83% of Greeks See Corruption in Society

A recent Palmos Analysis poll reveals widespread perception of corruption across politics, public works, and media, with citizens citing economic motives, lack of political will, and slow justice as key factors undermining trust in institutions

A new survey by Palmos Analysis for Greece’s National Transparency Authority reveals a stark perception of corruption among the Greek public. According to the findings, 83% of respondents believe corruption is present in the country, with the figure rising to 96% when including those who consider it moderately prevalent.

The poll highlights deep mistrust in institutions. Citizens identified several reasons behind corruption, including economic gain (39%), lack of political will (38%), delays in the judicial system (36%), ineffective oversight mechanisms (27%), cultural attitudes (26%), insufficiently strict laws (16%), and bureaucracy (9%).

The survey also pinpointed sectors where Greeks perceive corruption as most significant. Political institutions topped the list, followed by urban planning and public works, and the media. Other sectors noted included public finance, local administration, justice, migration and asylum, EU-funded programs, energy and environment, taxation, healthcare, social benefits, police, sports, education, culture, and even the armed forces, though to a lesser extent.

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