Over 100 Publicly Traded Companies Fail Transparency Tests
124 of the world's largest publicly traded companies are failing to disclose important information that could help identify corruption.
124 of the world's largest publicly traded companies are failing to disclose important information that could help identify corruption. That's according to an anti-graft organization that released results of the transparency tests on Wednesday. The Berlin-based company revealed that 90 of the companies tested don't disclose the taxes they pay abroad. 54 provided no information on their international revenue. Companies in China were the worst offenders, with Bank of China picking up the lowest score. The worst ranking U.S. companies were named as Google and Amazon, while Italian oil and gas giant Eni scored the highest. British companies were ranked as the most transparent overall.









