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Different forms of corruption, causes and 
consequences 
Class on Public Administration. Seminar 1 - Corruption in an international 
perspective 
L.A. Latif, Graduate Student
Table of Contents 
 Introduction 
 Definitions 
 Corruption 
 Bribes 
 Kickbacks 
 Embezzlement 
 Discussion: 
 Causes, and 
 Consequences 
 Recommendations 
 Reference sources
Introduction: Definitions 
 Corruption 
 Abuse of public office for private gain (World Bank). 
 Misuse of entrusted power for private gain (Transparency 
International). 
 Abuse of power for private gain (European Union, 2003). 
 Misuse of office for unofficial ends (Klitgaard, 1998)
Bribes 
 Where a government official asks for or obtains money or 
favor in return for a preferential treatment or government 
services 
 Exchange of favors between 2 persons 
 2 people are involved: briber (a civilian) and a bribee 
(commonly a state agent where the state agent misuses his or 
her power) 
 3rd party is harmed (consequence)
Embezzlement 
 Stealing! 
 Theft of resources. Disloyal employees steal from their employers 
 Different from bribe: only 1 person is involved 
 Overlap with bribery: A minister cannot directly transfer money to 
his/her account without reason. So, he/she obfuscates 
embezzlement by asking for fake receipts from non existent 
companies whose ownership is not disclosed. This introduces a 
fake client to the transaction and blurs the difference between 
bribery and embezzlement
Kickbacks 
Form of a bribe 
“Pay me from what I pay you” 
Difficult to distinguish 
between bribes and 
kickbacks 
Any ideas??
Causes and consequences: same coin? 
 According to Lambsdorff research on corruption is challenging 
because: 
 Causes of corruption seem to be its consequences; and 
 Consequences of corruption seem to be its causes.
Causes of corruption 
 Size of the public sector 
 Quality of regulation 
 Degree of economic competition 
 Structure of government 
 Amount of decentralization 
 Impact of culture, values and gender 
 Role of invariant features such as geography and history
1. Size of the public sector –limited role of the 
state in the modern society 
 Economists (Boyko et al. 1996; Shleifer and Vishny 1998) 
argument: privatize (corruption can be contained by minimizing 
the public sector) – limit government power. Boomerang effect: 
Corruption could be shifted from the public to private sector. 
Example: ??? Regulation. IFFS, TP, TE, transition period and 
corruption 
 Empirical findings: 
 NO: little support for this proposition. Little correlation between overall 
size of the public sector and corruption. Gerring and Thacker (2005). 
Example: ??? 
 YES: corruption significantly decreases with government size in high 
income countries. Graeff and Mehlkop (2003). Low income countries? 
Example: ???
2. Quality of regulation 
 Argument: Bad regulation is a cause of corruption. So it is not the size of government but 
administration. Complicated rules. Example; The Advertising of bill boards case 
(boundaries of counties in dispute). Former Land Laws of Kenya: BRIBES 
 The opposite is also true that corruption causes bad regulation. For example in 
procurement and creation of monopolies (unregulated). The case of Pakistan and 
Geothermal power plant in Kenya: KICKBACKS 
 Bad regulation and good regulation: what is this? Ask whether a regulation creates 
opportunities for corruption. This will take us in circles and we will have no causal 
connection. Hints helping us detect corruption: Ambiguities, gaps in law, higher barriers to 
market entry, time for registering businesses 
 State intervention in private sector: too much or too little? Gerring and Thacker 2005 
positive correlation between regulatory quality and absence of corruption.
3. Degree of economic competition 
 Economists argue that the absence of economic competition 
results in corruption. When there is competition, politicians have 
less to sell. When competition is restricted, profits increase and 
politicians can take the opportunity to assign these profits – in 
exchange for a share. 
 Reverse is also true: private firms can give bribes to politicians to 
offer market restrictions. Example; The Pakistani gold case. 
 Openness as a variable: The less competitive a market 
environment, the higher will be the extent of corruption. Ades and 
Di Tella (1995).
4. Structure of government
Democracy: constitutional structure and 
electoral system 
 Schumpeter’s argument: democracy limits corruption because of: 
 Political competition (checks and balances from opposition and 
accountability). Treisman: there is a reduction but not immediately: 
 IFF and the case of Zambian mining industry – Glencore (in 
transition) 
 Authoritarian (Goldenberg scandal) to democratic (Anglo leasing). 
Democracy does not reduce corruption. Corruption increases 
where president is more powerful (presidential system versus 
parliamentary system as the cause of corruption) 
 Voting process (leads to monitoring. What about electoral rigging? 
Manow: political party influence in election reduces corruption. 
Disagree: it is a cause and consequence of corruption
5. Decentralization: cause/consequence 
 Argument: can reduce corruption because brings government close to people, can work 
where there is good governance. 
 Corruption is high when spending is decentralized while revenue collection remains in 
control of the central government. The CDF system in Kenya as example 
 Goes to the earlier argument on size of government 
 Introduced kickbacks in award of local government contracts: case of Nairobi city council 
 Triesman (1999), Adsera et al (2000) and Panizza (2001) find no significant impact 
between between decentralization and corruption 
 Goldsmith (1999), Kunicova (2005), Gerring and Thacker (2004): federalism increases 
corruption
Decentralization (cont’d) 
 Testa (2003): bicameralism lowers corruption but ethnic, 
religious or linguistic fractions cause corruption
6. Impact of culture, value and gender 
 Trust placed in civil servants and evaluation of political system 
and low levels of corruption: “It’s our time to eat” culture of the 
Luos of Kisumu in Kenya 
 Values: ethnicity comes in and becomes a cause of corruption 
(retention in politics) 
 Male dominated networks may be causes of corruption (?? 
Bhutto, Sirleaf and 2 Japanese ministers)
7. Geography and History: Natural 
resources 
 Natural resources cause of corruption (Dutch companies in 
DRC, Canadian and Swiss companies in Zambia and 
Tanzania) 
 See GFI reports & StAR for more examples 
 Corrupt neighbors cause of domestic corruption where there is 
a strong regional exchange 
 Colonial heritages as causes of corruption: Land in Kenya
Consequences of corruption 
 Generates inequality 
 Impacts productivity and investment 
 Distorts the public and private sectors
Inequality 
 Of income (Gupta et. al, 2002 using Gini Coefficient), land and 
education 
 Inequality also causes corruption (Swamy et. Al, 2001)
Productivity and investment 
 Corruption decreases GDP per head (Slum dweller and 
DTA/Kickbacks effect on DRM) 
 Ali and Isse (2003): lowers growth (DRC and Leopold 
embezzlements) 
 Rock and Bonnet (2004): increases growth (East Asian newly 
industrializing countries – government promotional privileges 
for bribes)
Distorts public and private sector 
 Public 
Corruption leads to: 
 Misallocation of public resources (public servants appointed based on 
bribes and not competency)- good base for kickbacks – Mozambique 
case on bottle labeling machine 
 Distortions in budget allocation (need to conceal illicit payments so 
some goods preferred over others) 
 Reduced and low quality of public investments, services and 
environmental regulation 
 Esty & Porter (2002): Overinvestment in public infrastructure (though 
link is poor) 
 Mauro (1998): lower government spending on education
Continued 
 Private 
 Markets are affected (SMEs lose out on market share) 
 Aid and lending 
 Stocks and tax evasion 
 Underground economies 
 Deters foreign investors 
 Deters market entry
Corruption on investments 
 Reduces FDI 
 Vulnerability to currency rises 
 Studies show that firms adapt to a country’s level of corruption 
(shell companies, mailbox companies)
Recommendations 
 Creation of the office of the ombudsman (e.g., Kenya, 2010) 
 Stringent laws – punishable offences 
 Declaration of wealth and name and shame blacklists 
 Regulations where MNCs are concerned 
 Exchange of informations where DTAs are concerned 
 Civil service salaries 
 Merit based recruitment 
 Freedom of information (media/press) deters corruption 
 Independent judiciary 
 Alert public
Reference sources 
 Baker, R. W. 2005. Capitalism’s Achilles Heel: Dirty Money and How to Renew the Free- Market System. 
Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. 
 Global Financial Integrity, 2014. Hiding in Plain Sight: Trade Misinvoicing and the impact of Revenue Loss in 
Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Uganda: 2002-2011. Available at: http://www.gfintegrity.org/wp-content/ 
uploads/2014/05/Hiding_In_Plain_Sight_Report-Final.pdf 
 Johann Graf Lambsdorff, Causes and consequences of corruption: What do we know from a cross-section of 
countries. 
 Pech, Birgit/Debiel, Tobias, 2011: Corruption as an Obstacle to Development?, in: Unikate, No. 40, 16-25. 
 See: “For whom the windfalls? Winners and losers in the privatization of Zambia’s copper mines” by Alastair 
Fraser (Oxford University) and John Lungu (Copperbelt University), p. 7-87; July 2009. Publication available at: 
http://www.liberationafrique.org/IMG/pdf/Minewatchzambia.pdf 
 World Bank. 2008. Democratic Republic of Congo: Growth with Governance in the Mining Sector. Report 43402- 
ZR. Washington, DC: World Bank.
Thank you for listening

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Causes and consequences of corruption

  • 1. Different forms of corruption, causes and consequences Class on Public Administration. Seminar 1 - Corruption in an international perspective L.A. Latif, Graduate Student
  • 2. Table of Contents  Introduction  Definitions  Corruption  Bribes  Kickbacks  Embezzlement  Discussion:  Causes, and  Consequences  Recommendations  Reference sources
  • 3. Introduction: Definitions  Corruption  Abuse of public office for private gain (World Bank).  Misuse of entrusted power for private gain (Transparency International).  Abuse of power for private gain (European Union, 2003).  Misuse of office for unofficial ends (Klitgaard, 1998)
  • 4. Bribes  Where a government official asks for or obtains money or favor in return for a preferential treatment or government services  Exchange of favors between 2 persons  2 people are involved: briber (a civilian) and a bribee (commonly a state agent where the state agent misuses his or her power)  3rd party is harmed (consequence)
  • 5. Embezzlement  Stealing!  Theft of resources. Disloyal employees steal from their employers  Different from bribe: only 1 person is involved  Overlap with bribery: A minister cannot directly transfer money to his/her account without reason. So, he/she obfuscates embezzlement by asking for fake receipts from non existent companies whose ownership is not disclosed. This introduces a fake client to the transaction and blurs the difference between bribery and embezzlement
  • 6. Kickbacks Form of a bribe “Pay me from what I pay you” Difficult to distinguish between bribes and kickbacks Any ideas??
  • 7. Causes and consequences: same coin?  According to Lambsdorff research on corruption is challenging because:  Causes of corruption seem to be its consequences; and  Consequences of corruption seem to be its causes.
  • 8. Causes of corruption  Size of the public sector  Quality of regulation  Degree of economic competition  Structure of government  Amount of decentralization  Impact of culture, values and gender  Role of invariant features such as geography and history
  • 9. 1. Size of the public sector –limited role of the state in the modern society  Economists (Boyko et al. 1996; Shleifer and Vishny 1998) argument: privatize (corruption can be contained by minimizing the public sector) – limit government power. Boomerang effect: Corruption could be shifted from the public to private sector. Example: ??? Regulation. IFFS, TP, TE, transition period and corruption  Empirical findings:  NO: little support for this proposition. Little correlation between overall size of the public sector and corruption. Gerring and Thacker (2005). Example: ???  YES: corruption significantly decreases with government size in high income countries. Graeff and Mehlkop (2003). Low income countries? Example: ???
  • 10. 2. Quality of regulation  Argument: Bad regulation is a cause of corruption. So it is not the size of government but administration. Complicated rules. Example; The Advertising of bill boards case (boundaries of counties in dispute). Former Land Laws of Kenya: BRIBES  The opposite is also true that corruption causes bad regulation. For example in procurement and creation of monopolies (unregulated). The case of Pakistan and Geothermal power plant in Kenya: KICKBACKS  Bad regulation and good regulation: what is this? Ask whether a regulation creates opportunities for corruption. This will take us in circles and we will have no causal connection. Hints helping us detect corruption: Ambiguities, gaps in law, higher barriers to market entry, time for registering businesses  State intervention in private sector: too much or too little? Gerring and Thacker 2005 positive correlation between regulatory quality and absence of corruption.
  • 11. 3. Degree of economic competition  Economists argue that the absence of economic competition results in corruption. When there is competition, politicians have less to sell. When competition is restricted, profits increase and politicians can take the opportunity to assign these profits – in exchange for a share.  Reverse is also true: private firms can give bribes to politicians to offer market restrictions. Example; The Pakistani gold case.  Openness as a variable: The less competitive a market environment, the higher will be the extent of corruption. Ades and Di Tella (1995).
  • 12. 4. Structure of government
  • 13. Democracy: constitutional structure and electoral system  Schumpeter’s argument: democracy limits corruption because of:  Political competition (checks and balances from opposition and accountability). Treisman: there is a reduction but not immediately:  IFF and the case of Zambian mining industry – Glencore (in transition)  Authoritarian (Goldenberg scandal) to democratic (Anglo leasing). Democracy does not reduce corruption. Corruption increases where president is more powerful (presidential system versus parliamentary system as the cause of corruption)  Voting process (leads to monitoring. What about electoral rigging? Manow: political party influence in election reduces corruption. Disagree: it is a cause and consequence of corruption
  • 14. 5. Decentralization: cause/consequence  Argument: can reduce corruption because brings government close to people, can work where there is good governance.  Corruption is high when spending is decentralized while revenue collection remains in control of the central government. The CDF system in Kenya as example  Goes to the earlier argument on size of government  Introduced kickbacks in award of local government contracts: case of Nairobi city council  Triesman (1999), Adsera et al (2000) and Panizza (2001) find no significant impact between between decentralization and corruption  Goldsmith (1999), Kunicova (2005), Gerring and Thacker (2004): federalism increases corruption
  • 15. Decentralization (cont’d)  Testa (2003): bicameralism lowers corruption but ethnic, religious or linguistic fractions cause corruption
  • 16. 6. Impact of culture, value and gender  Trust placed in civil servants and evaluation of political system and low levels of corruption: “It’s our time to eat” culture of the Luos of Kisumu in Kenya  Values: ethnicity comes in and becomes a cause of corruption (retention in politics)  Male dominated networks may be causes of corruption (?? Bhutto, Sirleaf and 2 Japanese ministers)
  • 17. 7. Geography and History: Natural resources  Natural resources cause of corruption (Dutch companies in DRC, Canadian and Swiss companies in Zambia and Tanzania)  See GFI reports & StAR for more examples  Corrupt neighbors cause of domestic corruption where there is a strong regional exchange  Colonial heritages as causes of corruption: Land in Kenya
  • 18. Consequences of corruption  Generates inequality  Impacts productivity and investment  Distorts the public and private sectors
  • 19. Inequality  Of income (Gupta et. al, 2002 using Gini Coefficient), land and education  Inequality also causes corruption (Swamy et. Al, 2001)
  • 20. Productivity and investment  Corruption decreases GDP per head (Slum dweller and DTA/Kickbacks effect on DRM)  Ali and Isse (2003): lowers growth (DRC and Leopold embezzlements)  Rock and Bonnet (2004): increases growth (East Asian newly industrializing countries – government promotional privileges for bribes)
  • 21. Distorts public and private sector  Public Corruption leads to:  Misallocation of public resources (public servants appointed based on bribes and not competency)- good base for kickbacks – Mozambique case on bottle labeling machine  Distortions in budget allocation (need to conceal illicit payments so some goods preferred over others)  Reduced and low quality of public investments, services and environmental regulation  Esty & Porter (2002): Overinvestment in public infrastructure (though link is poor)  Mauro (1998): lower government spending on education
  • 22. Continued  Private  Markets are affected (SMEs lose out on market share)  Aid and lending  Stocks and tax evasion  Underground economies  Deters foreign investors  Deters market entry
  • 23. Corruption on investments  Reduces FDI  Vulnerability to currency rises  Studies show that firms adapt to a country’s level of corruption (shell companies, mailbox companies)
  • 24. Recommendations  Creation of the office of the ombudsman (e.g., Kenya, 2010)  Stringent laws – punishable offences  Declaration of wealth and name and shame blacklists  Regulations where MNCs are concerned  Exchange of informations where DTAs are concerned  Civil service salaries  Merit based recruitment  Freedom of information (media/press) deters corruption  Independent judiciary  Alert public
  • 25. Reference sources  Baker, R. W. 2005. Capitalism’s Achilles Heel: Dirty Money and How to Renew the Free- Market System. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.  Global Financial Integrity, 2014. Hiding in Plain Sight: Trade Misinvoicing and the impact of Revenue Loss in Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Uganda: 2002-2011. Available at: http://www.gfintegrity.org/wp-content/ uploads/2014/05/Hiding_In_Plain_Sight_Report-Final.pdf  Johann Graf Lambsdorff, Causes and consequences of corruption: What do we know from a cross-section of countries.  Pech, Birgit/Debiel, Tobias, 2011: Corruption as an Obstacle to Development?, in: Unikate, No. 40, 16-25.  See: “For whom the windfalls? Winners and losers in the privatization of Zambia’s copper mines” by Alastair Fraser (Oxford University) and John Lungu (Copperbelt University), p. 7-87; July 2009. Publication available at: http://www.liberationafrique.org/IMG/pdf/Minewatchzambia.pdf  World Bank. 2008. Democratic Republic of Congo: Growth with Governance in the Mining Sector. Report 43402- ZR. Washington, DC: World Bank.
  • 26. Thank you for listening

Editor's Notes

  1. Kunicova (2005) parliamentary system less corruption and presidential system more corruption. Debatable. States in transition.