Forbes Magazine invited me to write an article on corruption. Among others, I argue that the US financial crisis is a major and overdue wake-up call to the dormant anticorruption field, which for too long has focused on conventional second-order issues (here the article). I also suggest that some humility could help: for a change, lessons from an emerging economy could be useful to the current situation in the US. We know that the experience of Sweden in addressing their past financial crisis offers some insights.
But it is also important to draw on the lessons from other countries. Let us focus on Chile, another country in the Americas (the era of equating the US with America should be over anyway). I am getting questions about the parallels and insights from Chile for the US crisis. Let me bring up a few points here, with some more detail than in Forbes.