Ukraine receives more American foreign assistance and defense support than any country in a generation. Reconstruction financing from European institutions runs into the hundreds of billions. Congressional appropriations, IMF disbursements, EU macro-financial packages, and private capital are all making consequential bets on a single variable that no one, until now, had found a reliable way to quantify: the corruption risk profile of the individuals who actually control the money, the ministries, the courts, and the procurement systems. The Ukraine Corruption Risk Index was built to answer that question — not with another lengthy report that sits unread on a policy shelf, but with a score. One number. Updated every month. Benchmarked against a scale that every American journalist, Congressional staffer, compliance officer, and fund manager already understands from daily life.
Why a Score? The FICO Parallel Explained
The Fair Isaac Corporation's FICO score — introduced in 1989, now used in more than 90 percent of US lending decisions — solved a hard problem: how do you compress a complex, multi-dimensional assessment of financial behavior into a single number that enables fast, consistent, auditable decisions across millions of counterparties? The answer was a 300–850 scale, calibrated so that every point of movement carried the same meaning regardless of who was reading it.
The CRI applies the identical architecture to corruption risk, with the logic inverted. A score of 842 — like Ihor Kolomoisky, currently in pre-trial detention on fraud charges with US sanctions and a $5.5 billion bank fraud case — is the governance equivalent of a borrower in default: maximum documented risk, confirmed formal exposure, systemic damage already materialized. A score of 335 — like Oleksandr Klymenko, the SAPO head who resisted the July 2025 legislative assault on prosecutorial independence — is the equivalent of a AAA-rated borrower: a figure whose entire documented record works against corruption, not in its favor. Every point between those poles carries the same intuitive meaning it would in a credit context. A Congressional staffer, a compliance officer running PEP due diligence, or a fund manager evaluating Ukraine reconstruction exposure can apply an already-internalized risk framework without a crash course in Kyiv institutional politics.
The parallel is not cosmetic. Both systems share the same operational logic: a dynamic, evidence-based composite score updated on a regular cycle, with full transparency on what changed and why. Both enable fast, consistent decisions across a large population of counterparties in a domain where the cost of error is high. And both make the same fundamental promise: the number means the same thing to everyone who reads it.
The Five Risk Bands
| Band | Score | What It Signals | FICO Analogy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Critical | 750–850 | Formal conviction or indictment; US/EU sanctions; in custody or fled jurisdiction | Bankruptcy / default |
| High | 650–749 | Active NABU/HACC case; recent arrest; sanctioned but not yet convicted | Severely delinquent |
| Elevated | 550–649 | Credible press exposure; NABU or SAPO interest; no formal charges yet | Subprime — high-risk |
| Moderate | 450–549 | Governance concerns; limited formal adverse findings | Near-prime — watchlist |
| Low | 300–449 | Reform-oriented officials; anti-corruption leaders; minimal documented risk | Prime / excellent |
"Ukraine receives more American foreign assistance than any country in a generation. Every decision about that engagement hinges on one deceptively simple question: who, exactly, are we dealing with? The CRI was built to answer that question plainly, at scale, and in a language American decision-makers already understand."
How to Use the Index: A Guide by Audience
The CRI is built for fast deployment across multiple professional contexts. Score level is the entry point; score velocity — how fast a figure's score is moving month to month — is the advanced signal. A figure moving from 480 to 620 in a single update is as urgent a data point as a static score of 650.
Six Evidence Streams: How Every Score Is Built
The CRI is not a media clipping service. Each score is a weighted composite of six independent evidence streams, processed by proprietary AI models trained to recognize corruption signatures in public records, financial disclosures, procurement databases, and legal filings. The six streams are weighted so that formal legal findings — charges, convictions, sanctions — drive scores disproportionately, while press exposure and pattern signals contribute incrementally. No single stream can produce a High or Critical score in isolation.
The CRI Within the US and EU Anti-Corruption Architecture
The CRI was designed to complement — not duplicate — the existing international accountability framework. The United States has pursued anti-corruption as a formal national security priority through the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act (2016), the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, USAID's anti-corruption programming, the State Department's Section 7031(c) visa ban authority, and the Biden administration's first-ever US Strategy on Countering Corruption (2021), which elevated corruption to a core national security threat alongside terrorism and weapons proliferation. The REPO Task Force — established in 2022 to freeze and seize Russian assets connected to the Ukraine war — represents the most ambitious multilateral kleptocracy disruption effort in history.
The European Union operates its own autonomous sanctions regime, distinct from US OFAC designations, and has tied Ukraine's accession pathway and macro-financial assistance directly to anti-corruption conditionalities — most visibly when it froze €1.7 billion in aid within 48 hours of legislation threatening NABU's independence in July 2025. The EU's Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA), launched in 2025, adds a new institutional layer to cross-border financial crime monitoring.
The CRI aggregates intelligence from all of these frameworks — US sanctions, EU designations, NABU investigations, HACC proceedings, NAZK declarations — and synthesizes it into a single monthly score, publicly accessible to anyone. It is the intelligence layer above the institutional architecture: the analyst who has already read every OFAC update, every NABU press release, every HACC judgment, and every credible investigative report, and translated it into a number.
International Institutions: The Anti-Corruption Architecture
Validated in the Field: The Cardboard Revolution, July 2025
No index is meaningful until it is tested against real events in real time. The CRI's first field validation came in July 2025, when the Ukrainian parliament temporarily subordinated NABU and SAPO to a presidential appointee — triggering what became known as the Cardboard Revolution: the first significant mass protests in Ukraine since the full-scale Russian invasion began. The key figures behind the legislation were already flagged in the CRI's High and Elevated bands before the first protest sign was written on cardboard.
The crisis illustrated a principle that goes beyond individual scores: that institutional deterioration — a law that subordinates NABU to a presidential appointee — changes the effective risk profile of every active investigation, every frozen asset, and every reconstruction contract that depends on rule-of-law conditions. When the OECD warned the legislation would undermine the credibility of partners "considering investing in Ukraine's defense sector and its long-term reconstruction," that was a direct translation of institutional corruption risk into capital allocation risk. The CRI is built to make that translation readable before the crisis, not after.
Monthly Publication: A Living Index, Not a Static List
The CRI publishes in the first week of every month, with full transparency on every score change, correction, and amendment. Each monthly release documents precisely what changed, why, and what evidence triggered the movement. New figures are added as they become publicly consequential. The index will expand to eventually cover all significant politically exposed persons in Ukraine across government, business, judiciary, and civil society — and the roadmap extends beyond Ukraine, prioritizing countries with significant US foreign policy or investment exposure.
Score velocity — how fast a score is moving month to month — is treated as an independent signal, as important as absolute band position. A figure moving from 480 to 620 in a single update signals a developing situation as urgently as a static 750. The monthly change log makes that signal legible and auditable: like a credit bureau's monthly statement, not a one-time report.