What is "anti-corruption"?

Against corruption, advocate integrity.

Political ethics term, belongs to the category of political ethics. The basic content of clean government construction. Ideological and moral construction of the centralized embodiment. To clean government must be anti-corruption, and anti-corruption in order to clean government, ancient and modern China and the West can be no exception. China's **** production party has always insisted on "anti-corruption", especially in the economic system of reform and opening up the period of conversion, but also the "anti-corruption" as the party's clean government building program of action.

Expanded information:

1, grass-roots online platforms for anti-corruption: guerrilla warfare

The Chinese government is fighting a war against corruption. At the grassroots level, the Chinese government is fighting a guerrilla war. Informants and netizens use social media to expose rampant corruption. But most of the corrupt officials exposed are low-level officials.

Nevertheless, the viral videos that have gone viral have demonstrated that Beijing can no longer afford to make the fight against corruption a show - the kind of show that is meant to maximize the public relations effect while minimizing the substantive blow to the bureaucracy.

2. Low- and mid-level officials: a war of attrition

At the same time that the government is waging a guerrilla war against corruption on the Internet, it is also continuing a war of attrition against low and mid-level officials that has been going on for nearly two decades, according to the article.

Anti-corruption on this front is a battle of positions: the list of casualties continues to grow, but the content of the fight lacks substance, and the battle on this front appears to be slightly more intense in 2013 than it has been in the past few years.

Based on media reports and investigations of cases posted on the CCDI's website, the fight at this level seems to be more of a "Tiger Cubs" campaign, with arrests of officials below the county level, as well as lower-level officials and cadres who are the targets of the regular fight against corruption, i.e., a large number of "flies". This means a large number of "flies". But it seems that the Chinese government has yet to make any real breakthroughs in this area.

3. Business anti-corruption targeting domestic and foreign companies: the third front

The third front in the fight against corruption is the fight against business bribery, including corruption in domestic and foreign business organizations.

Chinese prosecutors have been involved in the fight against business corruption since 2006, and in 2013 prosecuted companies and individuals for commercial bribery of officials and businesses. 2013 saw Chinese prosecutors step up their efforts to fight corruption and expand their targeting to foreign businesses. Bribery and kickbacks have always been an open secret when it comes to doing business in China (and not just China, of course).

Clearly the Chinese government continues to fight corruption in this area. The number of people indicted by prosecutors for paying bribes reportedly increased by 18.6 percent to 5,515 in 2013, up from 4,650 in 2012, while 4,549 officials were investigated and sentenced by prosecutors for alleged commercial bribery.

Baidu Encyclopedia - Anti-Corruption and Integrity Initiative