Frank Vogl

Anti-Corruption • Ethics & Integrity

Frank has been engaged with global economics, banking, governance and anti-corruption for more than 40 years, as a journalist, as a World Bank senior official, as an anti-corruption civil society leader, and as a top level advisor to financial institutions.  Frank is President of Vogl Communications, Inc., which has provided advice to leaders of international finance for more than two decades.

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G20 must address financial integrity as corruption surges through major banking

August 01, 2012 by Frank Vogl in Corporate Governance, Corruption, Global Economy, NGOs, Public Sector Governance

Allegations of insider trading at Nomura, money laundering at HSBC, interest rate manipulation at Barclays – it’s one scandal after another! Some say mega-banks are too complex to manage and control, others blame bad management, still others say the culture is rotten. Corruption abounds. Greed, secrecy, arrogance, lack of a moral compass, and opportunity all combine in too many financial institutions. 

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August 01, 2012 /Frank Vogl
Corporate Governance, Corruption, Global Economy, NGOs, Public Sector Governance
Comment

Britain’s Corruption Scandals Will Be Overshadowed by the Olympics – but Not Forgotten

July 31, 2012 by Frank Vogl in Corporate Governance, Corruption, Public Sector Governance, Employment

The UK is in the midst of an avalanche of corruption, yet as if by magic, it will not place the multiple scandals on hold and distract itself with a feast of Olympic sport. The festivities may indeed bring joy to the public at large, although an abundance of press reports suggest Londoners are grumpy about everything from the rain to the traffic to the sheer cost of the games. 

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July 31, 2012 /Frank Vogl
Corporate Governance, Corruption, Public Sector Governance, Employment
Comment

The Euro Crisis Is All Politics - Rerun of a Bad Movie

July 26, 2012 by Frank Vogl in Corruption, Global Economy

The euro crisis will not be resolved until the citizens of Europe have greater confidence in the ability and the willingness of their national leaders to serve the public interest. Pundits may blame the bankers and politicians may blame the press, but over the last year on many trips to Brussels and Athens I have seen both the patent lack of political leadership and the deep mistrust of ordinary middle class Europeans.

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July 26, 2012 /Frank Vogl
Corruption, Global Economy
Comment
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Frank Vogl

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