How Monetary and Sex Bribery for Grades Undermines Academic Standards and Graduate Employability
by Dr. Philip V. Saywrayne, III
Published: December 3, 2025 • DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2025.91100167
Abstract
This article investigates the detrimental impact of bribery, both monetary and sexual, on academic integrity, institutional credibility, and graduate employability within global educational systems. Academic corruption, particularly in the form of “sex-for-grades” and “money-for-grades,” has become an alarming ethical and institutional crisis undermining higher education’s core purpose. Drawing on recent scholarly works and international case studies, the paper illustrates how such practices compromise academic standards, erode fairness, and produce graduates ill-equipped for professional competence. The findings reveal that these unethical practices distort meritocratic assessment, weaken institutional trust, and perpetuate cycles of mediocrity and corruption. Although the study draws primarily on secondary sources, thereby limiting contextual specificity, it highlights the urgent need for empirical, localized investigations to enrich the evidence base. The article concludes by recommending reforms in institutional governance, enforcement of anti-corruption policies, and integration of ethics education to safeguard academic integrity and enhance graduate employability.