Corruption is a widespread phenomenon that is generally considered harmful for important economic and political outcomes. Conversely, judicial accountability has positive connotations, suggesting honesty in upholding the rules of the game. We ask whether, as many seem to think, corruption worsens, and judicial accountability improves, inequality, and investigate this empirically using data from 145 countries 1960–2014. More specifically, we relate perceived corruption and de facto judicial accountability to gross-income inequality and consumption inequality, while controlling for other explanatory factors of potential importance. The study shows that corruption is negatively, and that judicial accountability is positively, related to both types of inequality. We suggest that this can be explained either by the non-elites being more skillful at using “petty corruption” or by the elites, deliberately (to retain a long-term power base) or unconsciously bringing about outcomes that benefit others more. The results are particularly pronounced in democracies; they withstand a region and decade jackknife analysis; and in the case of consumption inequality, the effect of corruption is increasing in the stability of political institutions, suggesting causal effects from corruption and judicial accountability. The findings suggest that what we conceptualize as “unfair procedures” – corruption and deviations from judicial accountability – may benefit the economically worst off and worsen the situation of the economic elite. As such, corruption may not be entirely bad, if one of its consequences is to reduce inequality – nor need judicial accountability be entirely good, if it serves to increase inequality. This does not imply that corruption is generally desirable, or that judicial accountability is generally undesirable, but knowledge of these effects can guide policymakers, in their attempts to battle corruption and strengthen judicial accountability, to handle increasing inequality through other methods.
Arrangements by which politically connected firms receive economic favors are a common feature around the world, but little is known of the form or effects of influence in business-
government relationships. We present a simple model in which influence requires firms to provide goods of political value in exchange for economic privileges. We argue that political influence improves the business environment for selected firms, but restricts their ability to fire workers. Under these conditions, if political influence primarily lowers fixed costs over variable costs, then favored firms will be less likely to invest and their productivity will suffer, even if they earn higher profits than non-influential firms. We rely on the World Bank's Enterprise Surveys of approximately 8,000 firms in 40 developing countries, and control for a number of biases present in the data. We find that influential firms benefit from lower administrative and regulatory barriers (including bribe taxes), greater pricing power, and easier access to credit. But these firms also provide politically valuable benefits to incumbents through bloated payrolls and greater tax payments. Finally, these firms are worse-performing than their non-influential counterparts. Our results highlight a potential channel by which cronyism leads to persistent underdevelopment.
This policy brief examines the timing of Turkey’s authoritarian turn using raw data measuring freedoms from the Freedom House (FH). It shows that Turkey’s authoritarian turn under the ruling AKP is not a recent phenomenon. Instead, the country’s institutional erosion – especially in terms of freedoms of expression and political pluralism – in fact began much earlier, and the losses in the earlier periods so far tend to dwarf those occurring later.
Since coming into office two years ago, Chinese President Xi Jinping has carried out a sweeping, highly publicized anticorruption campaign. Skeptics are debating whether the campaign is biased towards Mr. Xi’s rivals, and even possibly related to the current economic slowdown. What is less debated is the next stage of Mr. Xi’s anti-corruption strategy, which is going to alter the legal statutes. Amendment IX, proposed in October 2014, includes heavier penalties, but two important tools in the fight of corruption – one-sided leniency and asymmetric punishment – became more limited and discretional. We argue that studying a 1997 reform and its effects can shed some light onto why the Chinese leadership seems dissatisfied with the current legislation and the likely effects of the proposed changes.
1.. Islamic Rule and the Emancipation of the Poor and Pious
I estimate the impact of Islamic rule on secular education and labor market outcomes with a new and unique dataset of Turkish municipalities. Using a regression discontinuity design, I compare elections where an Islamic party barely won or lost municipal mayor seats. The results show that Islamic rule has had a large positive effect on education, predominantly for women. This impact is not only larger when the opposing candidate is from a secular left-wing, instead of a right-wing party; it is also larger in poorer and more pious areas. The participation result extends to the labor market, with fewer women classified as housewives, a larger share of employed women receiving wages, and a shift in female employment towards higher-paying sectors. Part of the increased participation, especially in education, may come through investment from religious foundations, by providing facilities more tailored toward religious conservatives. Altogether, my findings stand in contrast to the stylized view that more Islamic in‡uence is invariably associated with adverse development outcomes, especially for women. One interpretation is that limits on religious expression, such as the headscarf ban in public institutions, raise barriers to entry for the poor and pious. In such environments, Islamic movements may have an advantage over secular alternatives.
2. Islam and Long-Run Development
I show new evidence on the long-run impact of Islam on economic development. Using the proximity to Mecca as an instrument for the Muslim share of a country's population, while holding geographic factors fixed, I show that Islam has had a negative long-run impact on income per capita. This result is robust to a host of geographic, demographic and historical factors, and the impact magnitude is around three times that of basic cross-sectional estimates. I also show evidence of the impact of Islam on religious influence in legal institutions and women's rights, two outcomes seen as closely associated with the presence of Islam. A larger Islamic influence has led to a larger religious influence in legal institutions and lower female participation in public institutions. But it has also had a positive impact on several measures of female health outcomes relative to men. These results stand in contrast to the view that Islam has invariably adverse consequences for all forms of women's living standards, and instead emphasizes the link between lower incomes and lower female participation in public institutions.
3. The Rise of China and the Natural Resource Curse in Africa
We produce a new empirical strategy to estimate the causal impact of selling oil to China on economic and political development, using an instrumental variables design based on China's economic rise and consequent demand for oil in interaction with the pre-existence of oil in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Does Islamic political control affect women's empowerment? Several countries have recently experienced Islamic parties coming to power through democratic elections. Due to strong support among religious conservatives, constituencies with Islamic rule often tend to exhibit poor women's rights. Whether this relationship reflects a causal or a spurious one has so far gone unexplored. I provide the first piece of evidence using a new and unique dataset of Turkish municipalities. In 1994, an Islamic party won multiple municipal mayor seats across the country. Using a regression discontinuity (RD) design, I compare municipalities where this Islamic party barely won or lost elections. Despite negative raw correlations, the RD results reveal that over a period of six years, Islamic rule increased female secular high school education. Corresponding effects for men are systematically smaller and less precise. In the longer run, the effect on female education remained persistent up to 17 years after and also reduced adolescent marriages. An analysis of long-run political effects of Islamic rule shows increased female political participation and an overall decrease in Islamic political preferences. The results are consistent with an explanation that emphasizes the Islamic party's effectiveness in
overcoming barriers to female entry for the poor and pious.
Leniency policies and asymmetric punishment are regarded as potentially powerful anticorruption
tools, also in the light of their success in busting price-fixing cartels. It has been
argued, however, that the introduction of these policies in China in 1997 has not helped
fighting corruption. Following up on this view, the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist
Party passed, in November 2015, a reform introducing heavier penalties, but also
restrictions to leniency. Properly designing and correctly evaluating these policies is difficult.
Corruption is only observed if detected, and an increase in convictions is consistent
with both reduced deterrence or improved detection. We map the evolution of the Chinese
anti-corruption legislation, collect data on corruption cases for the period 1986-2010, and
apply a new method to identify deterrence effects from changes in detected cases developed
for cartels by Miller (2009). We document a large and stable fall in corruption cases
starting immediately after the 1997 reform, consistent with a negative effect of the reform
on corruption detection, but under specific assumptions also with increased deterrence. To
resolve this ambiguity, we collect and analyze a random sample of case files from corruption
trials. Results point to a negative effect of the 1997 reform, linked to the increased leniency
also for bribe-takers cooperating after being denounced. This likely enhanced their ability
to retaliate against reporting bribe-givers – chilling detection through whistleblowing – as
predicted by theories on how these programs should (not) be designed.
In this paper I examine the development effects of coups. I first show that coups overthrowing democratically-elected leaders imply a different kind of event than those overthrowing autocratic leaders, and that these differences relate to the implementation of authoritarian institutions following a coup in a democracy. Secondly, I address the endogeneity of coups by comparing the growth consequences of failed and successful coups as well as implementing matching and panel data methods, which yield similar results. Although coups taking place in already autocratic countries show imprecise and sometimes positive effects on economic growth, in democracies their effects are distinctly detrimental. I find no evidence that these results are symptomatic of alternative hypothesis involving the effects of failed coups or political transitions. Thirdly, when overthrowing democratic leaders, coups not only fail to promote economic reforms or stop the occurrence of economic crises and political instability, but they also have substantial negative effects across a number of standard growth-related outcomes including health, education, and investment.
Find more research publications at https://www.hhs.se/site
Arrangements by which politically connected firms receive economic favors are a common feature around the world, but little is known of the form or effects of influence in business-
government relationships. We present a simple model in which influence requires firms to provide goods of political value in exchange for economic privileges. We argue that political influence improves the business environment for selected firms, but restricts their ability to fire workers. Under these conditions, if political influence primarily lowers fixed costs over variable costs, then favored firms will be less likely to invest and their productivity will suffer, even if they earn higher profits than non-influential firms. We rely on the World Bank's Enterprise Surveys of approximately 8,000 firms in 40 developing countries, and control for a number of biases present in the data. We find that influential firms benefit from lower administrative and regulatory barriers (including bribe taxes), greater pricing power, and easier access to credit. But these firms also provide politically valuable benefits to incumbents through bloated payrolls and greater tax payments. Finally, these firms are worse-performing than their non-influential counterparts. Our results highlight a potential channel by which cronyism leads to persistent underdevelopment.
This policy brief examines the timing of Turkey’s authoritarian turn using raw data measuring freedoms from the Freedom House (FH). It shows that Turkey’s authoritarian turn under the ruling AKP is not a recent phenomenon. Instead, the country’s institutional erosion – especially in terms of freedoms of expression and political pluralism – in fact began much earlier, and the losses in the earlier periods so far tend to dwarf those occurring later.
Since coming into office two years ago, Chinese President Xi Jinping has carried out a sweeping, highly publicized anticorruption campaign. Skeptics are debating whether the campaign is biased towards Mr. Xi’s rivals, and even possibly related to the current economic slowdown. What is less debated is the next stage of Mr. Xi’s anti-corruption strategy, which is going to alter the legal statutes. Amendment IX, proposed in October 2014, includes heavier penalties, but two important tools in the fight of corruption – one-sided leniency and asymmetric punishment – became more limited and discretional. We argue that studying a 1997 reform and its effects can shed some light onto why the Chinese leadership seems dissatisfied with the current legislation and the likely effects of the proposed changes.
1.. Islamic Rule and the Emancipation of the Poor and Pious
I estimate the impact of Islamic rule on secular education and labor market outcomes with a new and unique dataset of Turkish municipalities. Using a regression discontinuity design, I compare elections where an Islamic party barely won or lost municipal mayor seats. The results show that Islamic rule has had a large positive effect on education, predominantly for women. This impact is not only larger when the opposing candidate is from a secular left-wing, instead of a right-wing party; it is also larger in poorer and more pious areas. The participation result extends to the labor market, with fewer women classified as housewives, a larger share of employed women receiving wages, and a shift in female employment towards higher-paying sectors. Part of the increased participation, especially in education, may come through investment from religious foundations, by providing facilities more tailored toward religious conservatives. Altogether, my findings stand in contrast to the stylized view that more Islamic in‡uence is invariably associated with adverse development outcomes, especially for women. One interpretation is that limits on religious expression, such as the headscarf ban in public institutions, raise barriers to entry for the poor and pious. In such environments, Islamic movements may have an advantage over secular alternatives.
2. Islam and Long-Run Development
I show new evidence on the long-run impact of Islam on economic development. Using the proximity to Mecca as an instrument for the Muslim share of a country's population, while holding geographic factors fixed, I show that Islam has had a negative long-run impact on income per capita. This result is robust to a host of geographic, demographic and historical factors, and the impact magnitude is around three times that of basic cross-sectional estimates. I also show evidence of the impact of Islam on religious influence in legal institutions and women's rights, two outcomes seen as closely associated with the presence of Islam. A larger Islamic influence has led to a larger religious influence in legal institutions and lower female participation in public institutions. But it has also had a positive impact on several measures of female health outcomes relative to men. These results stand in contrast to the view that Islam has invariably adverse consequences for all forms of women's living standards, and instead emphasizes the link between lower incomes and lower female participation in public institutions.
3. The Rise of China and the Natural Resource Curse in Africa
We produce a new empirical strategy to estimate the causal impact of selling oil to China on economic and political development, using an instrumental variables design based on China's economic rise and consequent demand for oil in interaction with the pre-existence of oil in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Does Islamic political control affect women's empowerment? Several countries have recently experienced Islamic parties coming to power through democratic elections. Due to strong support among religious conservatives, constituencies with Islamic rule often tend to exhibit poor women's rights. Whether this relationship reflects a causal or a spurious one has so far gone unexplored. I provide the first piece of evidence using a new and unique dataset of Turkish municipalities. In 1994, an Islamic party won multiple municipal mayor seats across the country. Using a regression discontinuity (RD) design, I compare municipalities where this Islamic party barely won or lost elections. Despite negative raw correlations, the RD results reveal that over a period of six years, Islamic rule increased female secular high school education. Corresponding effects for men are systematically smaller and less precise. In the longer run, the effect on female education remained persistent up to 17 years after and also reduced adolescent marriages. An analysis of long-run political effects of Islamic rule shows increased female political participation and an overall decrease in Islamic political preferences. The results are consistent with an explanation that emphasizes the Islamic party's effectiveness in
overcoming barriers to female entry for the poor and pious.
Leniency policies and asymmetric punishment are regarded as potentially powerful anticorruption
tools, also in the light of their success in busting price-fixing cartels. It has been
argued, however, that the introduction of these policies in China in 1997 has not helped
fighting corruption. Following up on this view, the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist
Party passed, in November 2015, a reform introducing heavier penalties, but also
restrictions to leniency. Properly designing and correctly evaluating these policies is difficult.
Corruption is only observed if detected, and an increase in convictions is consistent
with both reduced deterrence or improved detection. We map the evolution of the Chinese
anti-corruption legislation, collect data on corruption cases for the period 1986-2010, and
apply a new method to identify deterrence effects from changes in detected cases developed
for cartels by Miller (2009). We document a large and stable fall in corruption cases
starting immediately after the 1997 reform, consistent with a negative effect of the reform
on corruption detection, but under specific assumptions also with increased deterrence. To
resolve this ambiguity, we collect and analyze a random sample of case files from corruption
trials. Results point to a negative effect of the 1997 reform, linked to the increased leniency
also for bribe-takers cooperating after being denounced. This likely enhanced their ability
to retaliate against reporting bribe-givers – chilling detection through whistleblowing – as
predicted by theories on how these programs should (not) be designed.
In this paper I examine the development effects of coups. I first show that coups overthrowing democratically-elected leaders imply a different kind of event than those overthrowing autocratic leaders, and that these differences relate to the implementation of authoritarian institutions following a coup in a democracy. Secondly, I address the endogeneity of coups by comparing the growth consequences of failed and successful coups as well as implementing matching and panel data methods, which yield similar results. Although coups taking place in already autocratic countries show imprecise and sometimes positive effects on economic growth, in democracies their effects are distinctly detrimental. I find no evidence that these results are symptomatic of alternative hypothesis involving the effects of failed coups or political transitions. Thirdly, when overthrowing democratic leaders, coups not only fail to promote economic reforms or stop the occurrence of economic crises and political instability, but they also have substantial negative effects across a number of standard growth-related outcomes including health, education, and investment.
Find more research publications at https://www.hhs.se/site
Arrangements by which politically connected firms receive economic favors are a common feature around the world, but little is known of the form or effects of influence in business-government relationships. We argue that influence not only brings significant privileges for selected firms, but requires firms to relinquish certain control rights in exchange for subsidies and protection. We show that, under these conditions, political influence can actually harm firm performance. Enterprise surveys from approximately 8,000 firms in 40 developing countries indicate that influential firms benefit from lower administrative and regulatory barriers (including bribe taxes), greater pricing power, and easier access to credit. But these firms also provide politically valuable benefits to incumbents through bloated payrolls and greater tax payments. These firms are also less likely to invest and innovate, and suffer from lower productivity than their non-influential counterparts. Our results highlight a potential channel by which cronyism leads to persistent underdevelopment.
Recent work on the so-called resource curse has focused on the importance of the interaction between institutional quality and resource abundance. The combination of low quality institutions and easily appropriable resources (such as oil and minerals) tend to be particularly bad for economic development. On the other hand, if institutions are good these same resources contribute more to economic growth than other types of natural wealth. While certainly pointing in the right direction this strand of literature leaves some open questions. First, it is vague on the precise channels through which institutional quality operates. Second, the empirical measures of institutions are often composite measures that arguably include measures of institutional outcomes rather than durable “rules of the game”. Using data for the period 1970-2003, this paper study the extent to which combinations of resource-types and constitutional setup determine the degree of appropriative activity in a country. Our results show that parliamentary regimes and majoritarian electoral systems are associated with less (or no) resource curse-effect than are presidential and proportional electoral systems. These effects are particularly strong in countries having much ores, metals and fuels.
By Jesper Roine (with A. Boschini and J. Pettersson), proceedings from "Meeting Global Challenges in Research Cooperation", Uppsala.
Authors Olle Folke & Johanna Rickne
We study sexual harassment in nationally representative survey linked with register data,
combined with a novel survey experiment. Across the Swedish labor market, one sex has a higher
risk of sexual harassment from colleagues and managers than the other. In gender-mixed and
male-dominated occupations and workplaces, women have a higher risk than men, and men’s
risk is higher in highly women-dominated contexts. A hypothetical job-choice experiment with
vignettes for sexual harassment measures the disutility of this risk. Respondents have a large
disutility for high-risk contexts, described as having a harassment victim of their own sex, but a
low disutility when the victim was of the opposite sex. We argue that the lack of disutility among
the low-risk sex, coupled with information frictions, prevent economic compensation to the highrisk
sex. Wage patterns that would indicate economic compensation are also absent in data from
tax records. We conclude that sexual harassment should be conceptualized as gender
discrimination in workplace amenities, and that this discrimination reinforces sex segregation and
pay-inequalities in the labor market.
IOSR Journal of Humanities and Social Science is a double blind peer reviewed International Journal edited by International Organization of Scientific Research (IOSR).The Journal provides a common forum where all aspects of humanities and social sciences are presented. IOSR-JHSS publishes original papers, review papers, conceptual framework, analytical and simulation models, case studies, empirical research, technical notes etc.
Arrangements by which influential firms receive economic favors, has been documented in numerous case studies but rarely formalized or analyzed quantitatively. We offer a formal voting model in which political influence is modeled as a contract by which politicians deliver a more preferential business environment to favored firms who, in exchange, protect politicians from the political consequences of high unemployment. From this perspective, cronyism simultaneously lowers a firm’s fixed costs while raising its variable wage costs. Testing several of the implications of the model on firm-level data from 26 transition countries, we find that more influential firms face fewer administrative and regulatory obstacles and carry bloated payrolls, but they also invest and innovate less. These results do not change when using propensity-score matching to adjust for the fact that influence is not randomly assigned.
Dictatorships do not survive by repression alone. Rather, dictatorial rule is often explained as an ― authoritarian bargain by which citizens relinquish political rights for economic security. The applicability of the authoritarian bargain to decision-making in non-democratic states, however, has not been thoroughly examined. We conceptualize this bargain as a simple game between a representative citizen and an autocrat who faces the threat of insurrection, and where economic transfers and political influence are simultaneously determined. Our model yields precise implications for the empirical patterns that are expected to exist. Tests of a system of equations with panel data comprising 80 non-democratic states between 1975 and 1999 confirm the predictions of the authoritarian-bargain thesis, with some variation across different categories of dictatorship.
Spoils system, also called patronage system, practice in which the political party winning an election rewards its campaign workers and other active supporters by appointment to government posts and by other favours. The spoils system involves political activity by public employees in support of their party and the employees’ removal from office if their party loses the election. A change in party control of government necessarily brings new officials to high positions carrying political responsibility, but the spoils system extends personnel turnover down to routine or subordinate governmental positions (Encyclopaedia Britannica).
According to Sancino (2011), the term spoils system refers to the practice of political appointments, consisting in assigning temporary positions in the administrative structure of public organizations. These temporary positions are usually related to the political mandate.
FIVE TENDENCIES OF TODAY’S CORRUPTION AND ANTICORRUPTION POLICIES
Luís de Sousa, Chairman TIAC (TI-Portugal) and Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Aveiro (lmsousa@ua.pt)
Work in progress, please do not cite without author's permission
The Relationship Rural Development and CrimesAI Publications
Over the past few years, metropolitan crime has fallen significantly in the United States while nonmetropolitan crime has continued to increase. The main aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between crimes and urban development. This study had chosen a survey research, to analyze the relationship between the relationship rural development and crimes. The author applied a structured survey as tool of this research. I distributed 150 questionnaires, but only 118 questionnaires I was able to receive. The findings revealed that there is positive and significant relationship between crimes and urban development.
To avoid strikes and curb labour militancy, some governments have introduced legislation stating that union leadership as well as wage offers should be decided through union-wide ballots. This paper shows that members still have incentives to appoint militant union leaders, if these leaders have access to information critical for the members' voting decisions. Furthermore, conflicts may arise in equilibrium even though the contract zone is never empty and there is an option to resolve any incomplete information. Ballot requirements hence preclude neither militant union bosses nor inefficient conflicts.
Condemning corruption while condoning inefficiency: an experimental investiga...FGV Brazil
This article reports results from an economic experiment that investigates to what extent voters punish corruption and waste in elections. While both are responsible for a loss of welfare for voters, they are not necessarily perceived as equally immoral. The empirical literature in political agency has not yet dealt with these two dimensions that determine voters’ choices. Our results suggest that morality and norms are indeed crucial for a superior voting equilibrium in systems with heterogeneous politicians: while corruption is always punished, self-interest alone – in the absence of norms – leads to the acceptance and perpetuation of waste and social losses.
Date: 2016
Authors:
Arvate, Paulo Roberto
Souza, Sergio Mittlaender Leme de
What is the impact of organised crime on the allocation of public resources and on tax collection? This paper studies the consequences of collusion between members of criminal organisations and politicians in Italian local governments. In order to capture the presence of organised crime, we exploit the staggered enforcement of a national law allowing the dissolution of a municipal government upon evidence of collusion between elected officials and the mafia. We measure the consequences of this collusion by using newly collected data on public spending, local taxes and elected politicians at the local level. Difference-in-differences estimates reveal that infiltrated local governments spend more on average for construction and waste management, less for public transport and lighting, less for municipal police, and collect fewer taxes for waste and garbage. In addition, we uncover key elements of local elections associated with mafia-government collusion. In particular, Regression Discontinuity estimates show that infiltration is more likely to occur when right-wing parties win local elections.
Read more: https://www.hhs.se/site
Human rights in developing countries and its relationship with country’s econ...AI Publications
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship of human rights and economic development in the developing countries. A quantitative method used in order to analyze data gathered by the researcher. The researcher used questionnaire in order to be able to analyze the current study. A random sampling method used, where almost all participants will have equal chances of being selected for the sample. The researcher gathered 161 questionnaires, however 12 questionnaires were invalid and 149 questionnaires were properly completed. The questionnaire structured in the form of multiple choice questions. The finding of this study showed that there is a strong and positive relationship between human right and economic development in developing countries, according the research hypothesis was found to be supported which stated that a developed economic in developing country will have a positive relationship with the protection of human rights.
Poverty is associated with political conflict in developing countries, but evidence of individual grievances translating into dissent among the poor is mixed. We analyze survey data from 40 developing nations to understand the determinants radicalism, support for violence, and participation in legal anti-regime actions as petitions, demonstrations, and strikes. In particular, we examine the role of perceived political and economic inequities. Our findings suggest that individuals who feel marginalized tend to harbor extremist resentments against the government, but they are generally less likely to join collective political movements that aim to instigate regime changes. This potentially explains the commonly-observed pattern in low- and middle-income countries whereby marginalized groups, despite their political attitudes and high-levels of community engagement, are more difficult to mobilize in nation-wide movements. We also find that arenas for active political participation (beyond voting) are more likely to be dominated by upper-middle income groups who are committed, ultimately, to preserving the status quo. Suppressing these forms of political action may thus be counterproductive, if it pushes these groups towards more radical preferences. Finally, our findings suggest that the poor, in developing nations, may be caught in a vicious circle of self-exclusion and greater marginalization.
Anders Olofsgård (with R. Desai and T. Yousef).
Booklet highlighting the key messages from the OECD publication "Lobbyists, G...OECD Governance
Booklet highlighting the key messages from the OECD publication Lobbyists, Governments and Public Trust, Volume 3. More information can be found at www.oecd.org/gov/ethics/lobbyists-governments-and-public-trust-volume-3-9789264214224-en.htm
Causes of Corruption in the Public Sector.pdfWajidKhanMP
Various country-level factors affect the functioning of governments and their services, influencing the existence and prevalence of public sector corruption. A non-exhaustive list of factors includes:
Country size
Studies show that geographically large countries with sparse populations can be more prone to corruption as it becomes increasingly challenging to monitor remote officials (Goel & Nelson, 2010).
Country age
Newly independent countries, or those that have recently transitioned from authoritarian regimes to democracies, are likely to experience more corruption due, for example, to underdeveloped government systems and rent-seeking opportunities created by the privatization of state-owned assets. (Goel and Nelson, 2010). In the context of crime, rent-seeking means using public funds to increase a share of existing wealth without creating new wealth for the state.
Arrangements by which politically connected firms receive economic favors are a common feature around the world, but little is known of the form or effects of influence in business-government relationships. We argue that influence not only brings significant privileges for selected firms, but requires firms to relinquish certain control rights in exchange for subsidies and protection. We show that, under these conditions, political influence can actually harm firm performance. Enterprise surveys from approximately 8,000 firms in 40 developing countries indicate that influential firms benefit from lower administrative and regulatory barriers (including bribe taxes), greater pricing power, and easier access to credit. But these firms also provide politically valuable benefits to incumbents through bloated payrolls and greater tax payments. These firms are also less likely to invest and innovate, and suffer from lower productivity than their non-influential counterparts. Our results highlight a potential channel by which cronyism leads to persistent underdevelopment.
Recent work on the so-called resource curse has focused on the importance of the interaction between institutional quality and resource abundance. The combination of low quality institutions and easily appropriable resources (such as oil and minerals) tend to be particularly bad for economic development. On the other hand, if institutions are good these same resources contribute more to economic growth than other types of natural wealth. While certainly pointing in the right direction this strand of literature leaves some open questions. First, it is vague on the precise channels through which institutional quality operates. Second, the empirical measures of institutions are often composite measures that arguably include measures of institutional outcomes rather than durable “rules of the game”. Using data for the period 1970-2003, this paper study the extent to which combinations of resource-types and constitutional setup determine the degree of appropriative activity in a country. Our results show that parliamentary regimes and majoritarian electoral systems are associated with less (or no) resource curse-effect than are presidential and proportional electoral systems. These effects are particularly strong in countries having much ores, metals and fuels.
By Jesper Roine (with A. Boschini and J. Pettersson), proceedings from "Meeting Global Challenges in Research Cooperation", Uppsala.
Authors Olle Folke & Johanna Rickne
We study sexual harassment in nationally representative survey linked with register data,
combined with a novel survey experiment. Across the Swedish labor market, one sex has a higher
risk of sexual harassment from colleagues and managers than the other. In gender-mixed and
male-dominated occupations and workplaces, women have a higher risk than men, and men’s
risk is higher in highly women-dominated contexts. A hypothetical job-choice experiment with
vignettes for sexual harassment measures the disutility of this risk. Respondents have a large
disutility for high-risk contexts, described as having a harassment victim of their own sex, but a
low disutility when the victim was of the opposite sex. We argue that the lack of disutility among
the low-risk sex, coupled with information frictions, prevent economic compensation to the highrisk
sex. Wage patterns that would indicate economic compensation are also absent in data from
tax records. We conclude that sexual harassment should be conceptualized as gender
discrimination in workplace amenities, and that this discrimination reinforces sex segregation and
pay-inequalities in the labor market.
IOSR Journal of Humanities and Social Science is a double blind peer reviewed International Journal edited by International Organization of Scientific Research (IOSR).The Journal provides a common forum where all aspects of humanities and social sciences are presented. IOSR-JHSS publishes original papers, review papers, conceptual framework, analytical and simulation models, case studies, empirical research, technical notes etc.
Arrangements by which influential firms receive economic favors, has been documented in numerous case studies but rarely formalized or analyzed quantitatively. We offer a formal voting model in which political influence is modeled as a contract by which politicians deliver a more preferential business environment to favored firms who, in exchange, protect politicians from the political consequences of high unemployment. From this perspective, cronyism simultaneously lowers a firm’s fixed costs while raising its variable wage costs. Testing several of the implications of the model on firm-level data from 26 transition countries, we find that more influential firms face fewer administrative and regulatory obstacles and carry bloated payrolls, but they also invest and innovate less. These results do not change when using propensity-score matching to adjust for the fact that influence is not randomly assigned.
Dictatorships do not survive by repression alone. Rather, dictatorial rule is often explained as an ― authoritarian bargain by which citizens relinquish political rights for economic security. The applicability of the authoritarian bargain to decision-making in non-democratic states, however, has not been thoroughly examined. We conceptualize this bargain as a simple game between a representative citizen and an autocrat who faces the threat of insurrection, and where economic transfers and political influence are simultaneously determined. Our model yields precise implications for the empirical patterns that are expected to exist. Tests of a system of equations with panel data comprising 80 non-democratic states between 1975 and 1999 confirm the predictions of the authoritarian-bargain thesis, with some variation across different categories of dictatorship.
Spoils system, also called patronage system, practice in which the political party winning an election rewards its campaign workers and other active supporters by appointment to government posts and by other favours. The spoils system involves political activity by public employees in support of their party and the employees’ removal from office if their party loses the election. A change in party control of government necessarily brings new officials to high positions carrying political responsibility, but the spoils system extends personnel turnover down to routine or subordinate governmental positions (Encyclopaedia Britannica).
According to Sancino (2011), the term spoils system refers to the practice of political appointments, consisting in assigning temporary positions in the administrative structure of public organizations. These temporary positions are usually related to the political mandate.
FIVE TENDENCIES OF TODAY’S CORRUPTION AND ANTICORRUPTION POLICIES
Luís de Sousa, Chairman TIAC (TI-Portugal) and Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Aveiro (lmsousa@ua.pt)
Work in progress, please do not cite without author's permission
The Relationship Rural Development and CrimesAI Publications
Over the past few years, metropolitan crime has fallen significantly in the United States while nonmetropolitan crime has continued to increase. The main aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between crimes and urban development. This study had chosen a survey research, to analyze the relationship between the relationship rural development and crimes. The author applied a structured survey as tool of this research. I distributed 150 questionnaires, but only 118 questionnaires I was able to receive. The findings revealed that there is positive and significant relationship between crimes and urban development.
To avoid strikes and curb labour militancy, some governments have introduced legislation stating that union leadership as well as wage offers should be decided through union-wide ballots. This paper shows that members still have incentives to appoint militant union leaders, if these leaders have access to information critical for the members' voting decisions. Furthermore, conflicts may arise in equilibrium even though the contract zone is never empty and there is an option to resolve any incomplete information. Ballot requirements hence preclude neither militant union bosses nor inefficient conflicts.
Condemning corruption while condoning inefficiency: an experimental investiga...FGV Brazil
This article reports results from an economic experiment that investigates to what extent voters punish corruption and waste in elections. While both are responsible for a loss of welfare for voters, they are not necessarily perceived as equally immoral. The empirical literature in political agency has not yet dealt with these two dimensions that determine voters’ choices. Our results suggest that morality and norms are indeed crucial for a superior voting equilibrium in systems with heterogeneous politicians: while corruption is always punished, self-interest alone – in the absence of norms – leads to the acceptance and perpetuation of waste and social losses.
Date: 2016
Authors:
Arvate, Paulo Roberto
Souza, Sergio Mittlaender Leme de
What is the impact of organised crime on the allocation of public resources and on tax collection? This paper studies the consequences of collusion between members of criminal organisations and politicians in Italian local governments. In order to capture the presence of organised crime, we exploit the staggered enforcement of a national law allowing the dissolution of a municipal government upon evidence of collusion between elected officials and the mafia. We measure the consequences of this collusion by using newly collected data on public spending, local taxes and elected politicians at the local level. Difference-in-differences estimates reveal that infiltrated local governments spend more on average for construction and waste management, less for public transport and lighting, less for municipal police, and collect fewer taxes for waste and garbage. In addition, we uncover key elements of local elections associated with mafia-government collusion. In particular, Regression Discontinuity estimates show that infiltration is more likely to occur when right-wing parties win local elections.
Read more: https://www.hhs.se/site
Human rights in developing countries and its relationship with country’s econ...AI Publications
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship of human rights and economic development in the developing countries. A quantitative method used in order to analyze data gathered by the researcher. The researcher used questionnaire in order to be able to analyze the current study. A random sampling method used, where almost all participants will have equal chances of being selected for the sample. The researcher gathered 161 questionnaires, however 12 questionnaires were invalid and 149 questionnaires were properly completed. The questionnaire structured in the form of multiple choice questions. The finding of this study showed that there is a strong and positive relationship between human right and economic development in developing countries, according the research hypothesis was found to be supported which stated that a developed economic in developing country will have a positive relationship with the protection of human rights.
Poverty is associated with political conflict in developing countries, but evidence of individual grievances translating into dissent among the poor is mixed. We analyze survey data from 40 developing nations to understand the determinants radicalism, support for violence, and participation in legal anti-regime actions as petitions, demonstrations, and strikes. In particular, we examine the role of perceived political and economic inequities. Our findings suggest that individuals who feel marginalized tend to harbor extremist resentments against the government, but they are generally less likely to join collective political movements that aim to instigate regime changes. This potentially explains the commonly-observed pattern in low- and middle-income countries whereby marginalized groups, despite their political attitudes and high-levels of community engagement, are more difficult to mobilize in nation-wide movements. We also find that arenas for active political participation (beyond voting) are more likely to be dominated by upper-middle income groups who are committed, ultimately, to preserving the status quo. Suppressing these forms of political action may thus be counterproductive, if it pushes these groups towards more radical preferences. Finally, our findings suggest that the poor, in developing nations, may be caught in a vicious circle of self-exclusion and greater marginalization.
Anders Olofsgård (with R. Desai and T. Yousef).
Booklet highlighting the key messages from the OECD publication "Lobbyists, G...OECD Governance
Booklet highlighting the key messages from the OECD publication Lobbyists, Governments and Public Trust, Volume 3. More information can be found at www.oecd.org/gov/ethics/lobbyists-governments-and-public-trust-volume-3-9789264214224-en.htm
Causes of Corruption in the Public Sector.pdfWajidKhanMP
Various country-level factors affect the functioning of governments and their services, influencing the existence and prevalence of public sector corruption. A non-exhaustive list of factors includes:
Country size
Studies show that geographically large countries with sparse populations can be more prone to corruption as it becomes increasingly challenging to monitor remote officials (Goel & Nelson, 2010).
Country age
Newly independent countries, or those that have recently transitioned from authoritarian regimes to democracies, are likely to experience more corruption due, for example, to underdeveloped government systems and rent-seeking opportunities created by the privatization of state-owned assets. (Goel and Nelson, 2010). In the context of crime, rent-seeking means using public funds to increase a share of existing wealth without creating new wealth for the state.
The rule of law, by securing civil and economic rights, directly contributes to social prosperity and is one of our societies’ greatest achievements. In the European Union (EU), the rule of law is enshrined in the Treaties of its founding and is recognised not just as a necessary condition of a liberal democratic society, but also as an important requirement for a stable, effective, and sustainable market economy. In fact, it was the stability and equality of opportunity provided by the rule of law that enabled the post-war Wirtschaftswunder in Germany and the post-Communist resuscitation of the economy in Poland.
But the rule of law is a living concept that is constantly evolving – both in its formal, de jure dimension, embodied in legislation, and its de facto dimension, or its reception by society. In Poland, in particular, according to the EU, the rule of law has been heavily challenged by government since 2015 and has evolved amid continued pressure exerted on the institutions which execute laws. More recently, the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic transformed the perception of the rule of law and its boundaries throughout the EU and beyond (Marzocchi, 2020).
Running head CORRUPTION 5CorruptionAuthor’s Na.docxtodd271
Running head: CORRUPTION 5
Corruption
Author’s Name
Institutional Affiliation
Corruption
Introduction
Corruption is a significant crisis that kills the power of the constitution. Corruption diminishes the power of the society, economy, and social welfare of the nation. There are minimal chances of growth when corruption prevails. Thus, corruption is one of the biggest challenges facing the USA and is clearly shown by the form of administration. Factors that influence corruption is more, and the effect varies depending on the affected individuals. Typical corruption forms have taken way to inform of mishandling of policies, public funds misuse, and failure to submit to public growth projects. Current reports show that corruption is prevalent in many public sectors including but not limited to bribing of civil servants, misuse of political power, and bureaucrats using public power in the United States for a personal end.
Solution
s
Fighting corruption is a challenging task because individuals involved have either political or economic power this providing ways to manipulate the will of the weak. Regardless the report highlights possible ways to solve the issue of corruption while giving recommendations for implementation. First, it is possible to address corruption by engaging the public. Teaching the public about the effect of corruption would help combat the problem. That is, each person should be encouraged to follow the norms of the society and laws of the land (Olaguer, 2006). Following stands of morality would ensure that each person is watchful of individuals’ behaviors. Also, the public should learn how to spot instances of corruption and take necessary action when necessary. When the public is knowledgeable about the consequences of corruption, it is easier to engage in public participation in fighting the epidemic.
Next, corruption can be eradicated by employing a legal strategy. The process involves engaging the law, the judiciary, press, the police, and the media. By creating certainty and involving the bodies mention, it would be easier to discriminate corruption through justice. The legislature should be encouraged to review the laws and make clear the aspect of corrupt and corruption. Although the process might require more time, it would help understand when an individual is convicted of corruption (Heimann et al., 2008). Furthermore, the public should have the power to report against corrupt individuals in society without fear. While the legislature revises the laws, judicial civil servants would have the ability to sentence people from various social classes irrespective of their impact on society.
Third, decentralization of power is an essential step towards fighting corruption in the USA. This would give way for more transparency in the public sectors, procurement process, and budget process should be passed through mass media.
Best solution
Based on the time required to implement solutions, public participat.
We present results from a laboratory experiment identifying the main channels through which different law enforcement strategies deter organized economic crime. The absolute level of a fine has a strong deterrence effect, even when the exogenous probability of apprehension is zero. This effect appears to be driven by distrust or fear of betrayal, as it increases significantly when the incentives to betray partners are strengthened by policies offering amnesty to “turncoat whistleblowers”. We also document a strong deterrence effect of the sum of fines paid in the past, which suggests a significant role for salience or availability heuristic in law enforcement.
Corruption And Comparative Politics.pdfWajidKhanMP
Corruption And Comparative Politics
In general, established democracies have lower levels of corruption than dictatorships and fledgling democracies (Montinola & Jackman, 2002; Warren, 2004). However, if the regime is democratic, this alone does not guarantee freedom from corruption (Kramer, 2018; Kube, 2017; Seldadyo & De Haan, 2011; Uslaner & Rothstein, 2016). Wajid khan gives an example, if a democracy lacks transparency in political or campaign finance, has outdated freedom of information laws, has inadequate protection against whistleblowers, or uses untrustworthy media, a democratic state may experience corruption.
Moreover, crime, or at least the perception thereof, tends to increase as countries develop democratic processes. Governments have often not developed effective anti-corruption and integrity mechanisms and are currently trapped in cycles of corruption and weak democratic institutions." Using a panel of 103 countries over five years, Sung (2004) found that corruption first decreased, then increased, and then decreased again in countries becoming more democratic.
That is a combination of growing economic opportunities in the form of achievable rents (Menes, 2006) and the inability of state agencies to establish adequate control and oversight mechanisms for these new opportunities (Schneider, 2007). Sandvig (2006) says that corruption increases in places undergoing "rapid change," such as rapidly developing economies, post-communist countries, or countries transitioning from authoritarian to democratic governments. I am explaining.
Wajid khan Mp says A particular incentive is increased uncertainty. Over time, corruption decreases as governments develop their institutions and capabilities. However, this is not inevitable, and research shows that corruption exists even in the most stable and prosperous democracies (Pring & Vushi, 2019; On critical reflection, see Stephenson, 2019). Therefore, even if democracy is viewed as the preferred anti-corruption system, it is not democracy.
However, specific political institutions, actors, and processes play the role of checks and balances, including the role played. This provides an anti-corruption effect—different political parties. Moreover, when discussing corruption and democracy, it is necessary to recognize that there are many different types of democratic systems around the world, ranging from liberal democracies to democratic socialism to direct and indirect democracies. I have.
Other democratic systems can have various forms and levels of corruption. Nonetheless, as discussed in more detail below, the risk of corruption is generally driven by informally defined executive powers, limited political pluralism, media control, human rights abuses, and militarization of regimes, high in authoritarian systems (or dictatorships) that tend to be characterized. These fe
Human rights in developing countries and its relationship with country’s econ...AI Publications
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship of human rights and economic development in the developing countries. A quantitative method used in order to analyze data gathered by the researcher. The researcher used questionnaire in order to be able to analyze the current study. A random sampling method used, where almost all participants will have equal chances of being selected for the sample. The researcher gathered 161 questionnaires, however 12 questionnaires were invalid and 149 questionnaires were properly completed. The questionnaire structured in the form of multiple choice questions. The finding of this study showed that there is a strong and positive relationship between human right and economic development in developing countries, according the research hypothesis was found to be supported which stated that a developed economic in developing country will have a positive relationship with the protection of human rights.
The algerian economy governed by black corruption an empirical study from 200...sissanim
Abstract
The main objective of this paper is to highlight the concept of corruption and analyses our cumulative knowledge about corruption’s effects on the economic growth in Algeria during the period 2002–2015. This article emphasizes the major source of corruption and how the quality of institutions and government policies could mitigate the risk of corruption or increase it. The findings also show the great role of free media in most developing countries which created a new tendency to talk about the effects of corruption especially in recent years. Using a multiple regression model, we find that a 1% decrease in the corruption index CPI level increases the GDP growth rate by approximately 2,005%. The analysis also revealed that there is a negative relationship between the country rank and the economic growth. Finally, the results suggest that more economic freedom, social and political stability lead to less corruption.
The algerian economy governed by black corruption an empirical study from 200...sissanim
Abstract
The main objective of this paper is to highlight the concept of corruption and analyses our cumulative knowledge about corruption’s effects on the economic growth in Algeria during the period 2002–2015. This article emphasizes the major source of corruption and how the quality of institutions and government policies could mitigate the risk of corruption or increase it. The findings also show the great role of free media in most developing countries which created a new tendency to talk about the effects of corruption especially in recent years. Using a multiple regression model, we find that a 1% decrease in the corruption index CPI level increases the GDP growth rate by approximately 2,005%. The analysis also revealed that there is a negative relationship between the country rank and the economic growth. Finally, the results suggest that more economic freedom, social and political stability lead to less corruption.
CLASS MATTERS Hashimoto, Erica J . Journal of Criminal La.docxsleeperharwell
CLASS MATTERS
Hashimoto, Erica J . Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology ; Chicago Vol. 101, Iss. 1, (Winter 2011): 31-
76.
ProQuest document link
ABSTRACT
Poor people constitute one of the most overrepresented categories of people in the criminal justice system. Why is
that so? Unfortunately, we simply do not know, in large part because we have virtually no information that could
provide an answer. As a result of that informational vacuum, policymakers either have ignored issues related to
economic class, instead focusing on issues like drug addiction and mental illness as to which there are more data,
or have developed fragmented policies that touch on economic status issues only tangentially. The bottom line is
that without better data on the profile of poor defendants, coherent policy to address issues related to economic
status simply will not be enacted. Because we lack data on economic status, we also cannot ascertain whether the
system enforces criminal laws equally or whether it targets poor people. The inability to prove (or disprove) class
discrimination prevents policymakers from enacting any solutions and leads to mistrust in the system. This Article
highlights the potential beneficial uses of general data on criminal defendants and data on economic status of
criminal defendants in particular. It goes on to document the data we currently have on income levels of criminal
defendants, and the shortcomings both in our analysis of that data and in our data collection. Finally, the Article
provides a roadmap for how states and the federal government should collect and analyze data on the economic
status of criminal defendants. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
FULL TEXT
Headnote
Poor people constitute one of the most overrepresented categories of people in the criminal justice system. Why is
that so? Unfortunately, we simply do not know, in large part because we have virtually no information that could
provide an answer. As a result of that informational vacuum, policymakers either have ignored issues related to
economic class, instead focusing on issues like drug addiction and mental illness as to which there are more data,
or have developed fragmented policies that touch on economic status issues only tangentially. The bottom line is
that without better data on the profile of poor defendants, coherent policy to address issues related to economic
status simply will not be enacted. Because we lack data on economic status, we also cannot ascertain whether the
system enforces criminal laws equally or whether it targets poor people. The inability to prove (or disprove) class
discrimination prevents policymakers from enacting any solutions and leads to mistrust in the system.
This Article highlights the potential beneficial uses of general data on criminal defendants and data on economic
status of criminal defendants in particular. It goes on to document the data we currently have on income le.
Corruption, Norms, and Legal Enforcement Evidence from Diplom.docxrichardnorman90310
Corruption, Norms, and Legal Enforcement: Evidence from Diplomatic Parking Tickets
Author(s): Raymond Fisman and Edward Miguel
Source: Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 115, No. 6 (December 2007), pp. 1020-1048
Published by: The University of Chicago Press
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[ Journal of Political Economy, 2007, vol. 115, no. 6]
� 2007 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. 0022-3808/2007/11506-0002$10.00
Corruption, Norms, and Legal Enforcement:
Evidence from Diplomatic Parking Tickets
Raymond Fisman
Columbia University and National Bureau of Economic Research
Edward Miguel
University of California, Berkeley and National Bureau of Economic Research
We study cultural norms and legal enforcement in controlling cor-
ruption by analyzing the parking behavior of United Nations officials
in Manhattan. Until 2002, diplomatic immunity protected UN dip-
lomats from parking enforcement actions, so diplomats’ actions were
constrained by cultural norms alone. We find a strong effect of cor-
ruption norms: diplomats from high-corruption countries (on the
basis of existing survey-based indices) accumulated significantly more
unpaid parking violations. In 2002, enforcement authorities acquired
the right to confiscate diplomatic license plates of violators. Unpaid
violations dropped sharply in response. Cultural norms and (partic-
ularly in this context) legal enforcement are both important deter-
minants of corruption.
We thank Stefano Dellvigna, Seema Jayachandran, Dean Yang, Luigi Zingales, and sem-
inar participants at the Harvard Development Economics Lunch, Harvard Behavioral
Economics Seminar, Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Harvard Political Economy
discussion group, University of Michigan, London School of Economics, University of
Southern California, Stockholm University, University of California, Berkeley, Northwest-
ern University, University of .
Working together for effective natural resource governance? Considering risk and context in the relationship between horizontal and vertical accountability mechanisms.
Corruption is an issue that is affecting many countries in the world, and there are several approaches that have been found to effective depending on the other external factors. The Unites States has several anti-corruption approaches that were invested in countries of interest such as Afghanistan; however, these have failed dismally. The US government has spent over $70 million in different sectors that was intended to support anti-corruption initiative through the government, law enforcement, and journalists. However, there were several reports that were released indicated the lack of preparation and the strategic flaws in the approach taken by the United States. Afghanistan still poses a security risk to the United States, and public funding towards reconstruction of the country should take an evidence based approach that considers effective mechanisms applies in similar regimes. This paper evaluate the current framework of the procurement to preventing corruption by the United States and evidence based mechanisms by organizations that havebeen resistant to corruption.
Presented by Anastasia Luzgina during the conference "Belarus at the crossroads: The complex role of sanctions in the context of totalitarian backsliding" on April 23, 2024.
Presented by Erlend Bollman Bjørtvedt during the conference "Belarus at the crossroads: The complex role of sanctions in the context of totalitarian backsliding" on April 23, 2024.
Presented by Dzimtry Kruk during the conference "Belarus at the crossroads: The complex role of sanctions in the context of totalitarian backsliding" on April 23, 2024.
Presented by Lev Lvovskiy during the conference "Belarus at the crossroads: The complex role of sanctions in the context of totalitarian backsliding" on April 23, 2024.
Presented by Chloé Le Coq, Professor of Economics, University of Paris-Panthéon-Assas, Economics and Law Research Center (CRED), during SITE 2023 Development Day conference.
This year’s SITE Development Day conference will focus on the Russian war on Ukraine. We will discuss the situation in Ukraine and neighbouring countries, how to finance and organize financial support within the EU and within Sweden, and how to deal with the current energy crisis.
This year’s SITE Development Day conference will focus on the Russian war on Ukraine. We will discuss the situation in Ukraine and neighbouring countries, how to finance and organize financial support within the EU and within Sweden, and how to deal with the current energy crisis.
The (Ce)² Workshop is organised as an initiative of the FREE Network by one of its members, the Centre for Economic Analysis (CenEA, Poland) together with the Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice (CeMMAP, UK). This will be the seventh edition of the workshop which will be held in Warsaw on 27-28 June 2022.
The (Ce)2 workshop is organised as an initiative of the FREE Network by one of its members, the Centre for Economic Analysis (CenEA, Poland) together with the Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice (CeMMAP, UK). This will be the seventh edition of the workshop which will be held in Warsaw on 27-28 June 2022.
The (Ce)2 workshop is organised as an initiative of the FREE Network by one of its members, the Centre for Economic Analysis (CenEA, Poland) together with the Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice (CeMMAP, UK). This will be the seventh edition of the workshop which will be held in Warsaw on 27-28 June 2022.
The (Ce)2 workshop is organised as an initiative of the FREE Network by one of its members, the Centre for Economic Analysis (CenEA, Poland) together with the Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice (CeMMAP, UK). This will be the seventh edition of the workshop which will be held in Warsaw on 27-28 June 2022.
when will pi network coin be available on crypto exchange.DOT TECH
There is no set date for when Pi coins will enter the market.
However, the developers are working hard to get them released as soon as possible.
Once they are available, users will be able to exchange other cryptocurrencies for Pi coins on designated exchanges.
But for now the only way to sell your pi coins is through verified pi vendor.
Here is the telegram contact of my personal pi vendor
@Pi_vendor_247
how to sell pi coins in South Korea profitably.DOT TECH
Yes. You can sell your pi network coins in South Korea or any other country, by finding a verified pi merchant
What is a verified pi merchant?
Since pi network is not launched yet on any exchange, the only way you can sell pi coins is by selling to a verified pi merchant, and this is because pi network is not launched yet on any exchange and no pre-sale or ico offerings Is done on pi.
Since there is no pre-sale, the only way exchanges can get pi is by buying from miners. So a pi merchant facilitates these transactions by acting as a bridge for both transactions.
How can i find a pi vendor/merchant?
Well for those who haven't traded with a pi merchant or who don't already have one. I will leave the telegram id of my personal pi merchant who i trade pi with.
Tele gram: @Pi_vendor_247
#pi #sell #nigeria #pinetwork #picoins #sellpi #Nigerian #tradepi #pinetworkcoins #sellmypi
Abhay Bhutada Leads Poonawalla Fincorp To Record Low NPA And Unprecedented Gr...Vighnesh Shashtri
Under the leadership of Abhay Bhutada, Poonawalla Fincorp has achieved record-low Non-Performing Assets (NPA) and witnessed unprecedented growth. Bhutada's strategic vision and effective management have significantly enhanced the company's financial health, showcasing a robust performance in the financial sector. This achievement underscores the company's resilience and ability to thrive in a competitive market, setting a new benchmark for operational excellence in the industry.
how can i use my minded pi coins I need some funds.DOT TECH
If you are interested in selling your pi coins, i have a verified pi merchant, who buys pi coins and resell them to exchanges looking forward to hold till mainnet launch.
Because the core team has announced that pi network will not be doing any pre-sale. The only way exchanges like huobi, bitmart and hotbit can get pi is by buying from miners.
Now a merchant stands in between these exchanges and the miners. As a link to make transactions smooth. Because right now in the enclosed mainnet you can't sell pi coins your self. You need the help of a merchant,
i will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant below. 👇 I and my friends has traded more than 3000pi coins with him successfully.
@Pi_vendor_247
The European Unemployment Puzzle: implications from population agingGRAPE
We study the link between the evolving age structure of the working population and unemployment. We build a large new Keynesian OLG model with a realistic age structure, labor market frictions, sticky prices, and aggregate shocks. Once calibrated to the European economy, we quantify the extent to which demographic changes over the last three decades have contributed to the decline of the unemployment rate. Our findings yield important implications for the future evolution of unemployment given the anticipated further aging of the working population in Europe. We also quantify the implications for optimal monetary policy: lowering inflation volatility becomes less costly in terms of GDP and unemployment volatility, which hints that optimal monetary policy may be more hawkish in an aging society. Finally, our results also propose a partial reversal of the European-US unemployment puzzle due to the fact that the share of young workers is expected to remain robust in the US.
how to sell pi coins at high rate quickly.DOT TECH
Where can I sell my pi coins at a high rate.
Pi is not launched yet on any exchange. But one can easily sell his or her pi coins to investors who want to hold pi till mainnet launch.
This means crypto whales want to hold pi. And you can get a good rate for selling pi to them. I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi vendor below.
A vendor is someone who buys from a miner and resell it to a holder or crypto whale.
Here is the telegram contact of my vendor:
@Pi_vendor_247
how can I sell pi coins after successfully completing KYCDOT TECH
Pi coins is not launched yet in any exchange 💱 this means it's not swappable, the current pi displaying on coin market cap is the iou version of pi. And you can learn all about that on my previous post.
RIGHT NOW THE ONLY WAY you can sell pi coins is through verified pi merchants. A pi merchant is someone who buys pi coins and resell them to exchanges and crypto whales. Looking forward to hold massive quantities of pi coins before the mainnet launch.
This is because pi network is not doing any pre-sale or ico offerings, the only way to get my coins is from buying from miners. So a merchant facilitates the transactions between the miners and these exchanges holding pi.
I and my friends has sold more than 6000 pi coins successfully with this method. I will be happy to share the contact of my personal pi merchant. The one i trade with, if you have your own merchant you can trade with them. For those who are new.
Message: @Pi_vendor_247 on telegram.
I wouldn't advise you selling all percentage of the pi coins. Leave at least a before so its a win win during open mainnet. Have a nice day pioneers ♥️
#kyc #mainnet #picoins #pi #sellpi #piwallet
#pinetwork
What price will pi network be listed on exchangesDOT TECH
The rate at which pi will be listed is practically unknown. But due to speculations surrounding it the predicted rate is tends to be from 30$ — 50$.
So if you are interested in selling your pi network coins at a high rate tho. Or you can't wait till the mainnet launch in 2026. You can easily trade your pi coins with a merchant.
A merchant is someone who buys pi coins from miners and resell them to Investors looking forward to hold massive quantities till mainnet launch.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi vendor to trade with.
@Pi_vendor_247
USDA Loans in California: A Comprehensive Overview.pptxmarketing367770
USDA Loans in California: A Comprehensive Overview
If you're dreaming of owning a home in California's rural or suburban areas, a USDA loan might be the perfect solution. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) offers these loans to help low-to-moderate-income individuals and families achieve homeownership.
Key Features of USDA Loans:
Zero Down Payment: USDA loans require no down payment, making homeownership more accessible.
Competitive Interest Rates: These loans often come with lower interest rates compared to conventional loans.
Flexible Credit Requirements: USDA loans have more lenient credit score requirements, helping those with less-than-perfect credit.
Guaranteed Loan Program: The USDA guarantees a portion of the loan, reducing risk for lenders and expanding borrowing options.
Eligibility Criteria:
Location: The property must be located in a USDA-designated rural or suburban area. Many areas in California qualify.
Income Limits: Applicants must meet income guidelines, which vary by region and household size.
Primary Residence: The home must be used as the borrower's primary residence.
Application Process:
Find a USDA-Approved Lender: Not all lenders offer USDA loans, so it's essential to choose one approved by the USDA.
Pre-Qualification: Determine your eligibility and the amount you can borrow.
Property Search: Look for properties in eligible rural or suburban areas.
Loan Application: Submit your application, including financial and personal information.
Processing and Approval: The lender and USDA will review your application. If approved, you can proceed to closing.
USDA loans are an excellent option for those looking to buy a home in California's rural and suburban areas. With no down payment and flexible requirements, these loans make homeownership more attainable for many families. Explore your eligibility today and take the first step toward owning your dream home.
The secret way to sell pi coins effortlessly.DOT TECH
Well as we all know pi isn't launched yet. But you can still sell your pi coins effortlessly because some whales in China are interested in holding massive pi coins. And they are willing to pay good money for it. If you are interested in selling I will leave a contact for you. Just telegram this number below. I sold about 3000 pi coins to him and he paid me immediately.
Telegram: @Pi_vendor_247
US Economic Outlook - Being Decided - M Capital Group August 2021.pdfpchutichetpong
The U.S. economy is continuing its impressive recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and not slowing down despite re-occurring bumps. The U.S. savings rate reached its highest ever recorded level at 34% in April 2020 and Americans seem ready to spend. The sectors that had been hurt the most by the pandemic specifically reduced consumer spending, like retail, leisure, hospitality, and travel, are now experiencing massive growth in revenue and job openings.
Could this growth lead to a “Roaring Twenties”? As quickly as the U.S. economy contracted, experiencing a 9.1% drop in economic output relative to the business cycle in Q2 2020, the largest in recorded history, it has rebounded beyond expectations. This surprising growth seems to be fueled by the U.S. government’s aggressive fiscal and monetary policies, and an increase in consumer spending as mobility restrictions are lifted. Unemployment rates between June 2020 and June 2021 decreased by 5.2%, while the demand for labor is increasing, coupled with increasing wages to incentivize Americans to rejoin the labor force. Schools and businesses are expected to fully reopen soon. In parallel, vaccination rates across the country and the world continue to rise, with full vaccination rates of 50% and 14.8% respectively.
However, it is not completely smooth sailing from here. According to M Capital Group, the main risks that threaten the continued growth of the U.S. economy are inflation, unsettled trade relations, and another wave of Covid-19 mutations that could shut down the world again. Have we learned from the past year of COVID-19 and adapted our economy accordingly?
“In order for the U.S. economy to continue growing, whether there is another wave or not, the U.S. needs to focus on diversifying supply chains, supporting business investment, and maintaining consumer spending,” says Grace Feeley, a research analyst at M Capital Group.
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Corruption, Judicial Accountability and Inequality: Unfair Procedures May Benefit the Worst-Off
1. 1
Corruption, Judicial Accountability and Inequality:
Unfair Procedures May Benefit the Worst-Off
NICLAS BERGGRENa,b
and CHRISTIAN BJØRNSKOVc,a,*
a
Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN), Box 55665, 102 15 Stockholm, Sweden
b
Department of Economics, University of Economics in Prague, Winston Churchill Square 4,
130 67 Prague 3, Czechia
c
Department of Economics, Aarhus University, Fuglesangs Allé 4, 8210 Aarhus V, Denmark
Summary. — Corruption is a widespread phenomenon that is generally considered harmful
for important economic and political outcomes. Conversely, judicial accountability has
positive connotations, suggesting honesty in upholding the rules of the game. We ask
whether, as many seem to think, corruption worsens, and judicial accountability improves,
inequality, and investigate this empirically using data from 145 countries 1960–2014. More
specifically, we relate perceived corruption and de facto judicial accountability to gross-
income inequality and consumption inequality, while controlling for other explanatory factors
of potential importance. The study shows that corruption is negatively, and that judicial
accountability is positively, related to both types of inequality. We suggest that this can be
explained either by the non-elites being more skillful at using “petty corruption” or by the
elites, deliberately (to retain a long-term power base) or unconsciously bringing about
outcomes that benefit others more. The results are particularly pronounced in democracies;
they withstand a region and decade jackknife analysis; and in the case of consumption
inequality, the effect of corruption is increasing in the stability of political institutions,
*
Corresponding author. E-mail addresses: niclas.berggren@ifn.se (N. Berggren), chbj@econ.au.dk (C.
Bjørnskov). The authors wish to thank Krisztina Kis-Katos, Pierre-Guillaume Méon and participants at the
inaugural workshop of the Institute for Corruption Studies (Chicago, May 2018), at the conference of the World
Interdisciplinary Network for Institutional Research (Hong Kong, September 2018) and at a seminar at the
University of Groningen (February 2019) for helpful comments. Financial support from the Swedish Research
Council (grant 2103-734, Berggren), the Czech Science Foundation (GA ČR) (grant 19-03102S, Berggren) and
the Jan Wallander and Tom Hedelius Foundation (Bjørnskov) is gratefully acknowledged.
2. 2
suggesting causal effects from corruption and judicial accountability. The findings suggest
that what we conceptualize as “unfair procedures” – corruption and deviations from judicial
accountability – may benefit the economically worst off and worsen the situation of the
economic elite. As such, corruption may not be entirely bad, if one of its consequences is to
reduce inequality – nor need judicial accountability be entirely good, if it serves to increase
inequality. This does not imply that corruption is generally desirable, or that judicial
accountability is generally undesirable, but knowledge of these effects can guide
policymakers, in their attempts to battle corruption and strengthen judicial accountability, to
handle increasing inequality through other methods.
Key words — corruption, inequality, institutions, rent-seeking
JEL codes — C31, D02, D31, D72, D73, E26
1. INTRODUCTION
Corruption is largely regarded as a pernicious activity, for breaching procedural
justice, for distorting political decisions and for generating various undesirable outcomes,
such as lower economic growth.1
One common concern is that corruption favors the rich and
powerful. Conversely, judicial accountability (a prime aspect of institutional quality) is often
seen not only as an antidote to corruption but also as something valuable per se, although the
focus is rarely on the distributional consequences.2
When corruption is present, and when
judicial accountability is compromised, one may talk of “unfair procedures” in public
governance. In this study, we aim to analyze how these unfair procedures, whereby people
gain influence over policy, legislation and their implementation in violation of the general
1
On the generally negative relation between corruption and economic growth, see, e.g., Aidt (2009) and
Pellegrini (2011a). However, Méon and Weill (2010) find that in settings with very poor institutions, corruption
can be efficiency-enhancing.
2
For examples of a small literature relating, among other things, the quality of the legal system to inequality,
see, Berggren (1999) and Bergh and Nilsson (2010). For one of many studies showing a positive relationship
between judicial accountability and GDP per capita, see Voigt (2008).
3. 3
system of rules, relate to income and consumption inequality. Who benefits and who is made
worse thereby?
We follow Bergh et al. (2016, p. 39) by regarding corruption as “the abuse of
authority in which politicians and officials exploit their official position to engage in
favoritism, thereby contravening the norm of impartiality in the exercise of authority to
obtain direct or indirect personal gain for themselves or persons close to them.”3
Such
favoritism typically presupposes the existence of another party who enters into some sort of
exchange with the public official – it might, for example, be a contractor who offers a
politician a house or a payment, now or later – if the politician ensures that the contractor
obtains a lucrative contract with the government in violation of procedural rules. Corruption
can also occur in the legal sphere – and we study it by focusing on judicial accountability.
When this feature of legal institutions is in place, judges who engage in serious misconduct
are either fired or disciplined. We interpret its absence as implying corrupt practices that
allow judges to circumvent the rules, such as the ones requiring them to conscientiously
implement and enforce government legislation.
As Klitgaard (1988) originally emphasized, corruption is the outcome of monopoly
plus discretion minus accountability. Indeed, this is why political institutions – not least
democracy as such as well as various features of democracy, such as press freedom, free and
recurring elections and a division of power – may help stifle corrupt behavior (Aidt, 2003).4
They may also affect what the consequences of corruption look like, given that corruption
occurs, by contributing to shaping which policies are instituted. One such consequence
concerns the distribution and use of resources.
This insight is captured in our theoretical framework, which links political institutions
(which give de jure power) and resources (which give de facto power and can be used for
corruption) to the design of economic institutions and policies, as well as legal institutions
and practices, that in turn shape economic outcomes and the distribution of resources (which
is shaped both by the workings of the economic process and by redistribution). The political
institutions and their stability determine not only who has formal political power but also
influence how those with resources and actual political power are able to use those resources
to try to influence the decisions taken (Olson, 1982). One might assume that people with
3
This is in line with definitions offered in Rose-Ackerman (1978), Jain (2001) and Aidt (2003).
4
Previous studies have shown that there are links between political institutions and corruption – see, e.g.,
Gerring and Thacker (2004), Lederman et al. (2005), Dreher et al. (2009) and Bjørnskov (2011).
4. 4
resources and an openness to corruption will try to have the economic institutions and
policies formed such that they get more resources, and if the richest people are most active
here, this suggests that corruption is linked to more inequality.
Yet, we emphasize that this need not be the case: It could be that those people realize
that they cannot push through economic institutions and policies that primarily benefit them,
due to the risk of social turmoil; or they can have an altruistic streak, so as to act to benefit
others out of concern for their welfare; or it could be that people other than the richest are
more successful, at times, in getting favors (e.g., on the local level, with much personal
interaction between people in general and public officials). In these latter cases, more
corruption could entail less inequality. By interacting the stability of political institutions with
corruption, one can also investigate how this effect varies – the Olsonian idea of institutional
sclerosis implies that stability can give greater options for corrupt people to influence
decisions in line with their preferences. Hence, one would expect the relationship between
corruption and inequality to become stronger, in whatever direction, with more political
stability.
In our empirical analysis, we use the measures of corruption and judicial
accountability of the V-Dem project to study consequences for inequality, as it offers the
longest time series available for a large number of countries (Coppedge et al., 2017). Our
dependent variables are income and consumption inequality, which are measured both as
income/consumption shares per quintile and as Gini and Theil coefficients from the
Göttingen Consumption and Income Project (GCIP, 2018). The two inequality measures are
related in the sense that net income puts a limit on absolute consumption: those with small
incomes cannot spend all that much. But consumption patterns are also a matter of preference
(of how much to save and how much to consume out of the net income one gets), which
indicates that some people with high incomes may spend quite little, especially in relation to
their income, if they for example have a thrifty side to them or perceive a need to maintain a
buffer or level of insurance as a response to substantial uncertainty. Meyer and Sullivan
(2017) argue that consumption inequality is a useful complement measure because it often
provides a more accurate picture of economic well-being than income.5
5
Comparisons of trends in income and consumption inequality tend to find that the latter has not increased as
much and is lower: see, e.g., Meyer and Sullivan (2017) for the United States, Brzozowski et al. (2010) for
Canada and Jappelli and Pistaferri (2010) for Italy.
5. 5
The results indicate that corruption is negatively related to both gross-income and
consumption inequality, while judicial accountability is positively related to such
distributional outcomes. More specifically, the more corruption there is, the higher is the
income and consumption of the bottom quintile, and the more accountable the de facto
procedures of the judicial institutions are, the higher is the income and consumption of the
top quintile. These results are confirmed, in the case of consumption inequality, when using
Gini and Theil coefficients instead of quintile shares.
Our findings suggest that in spite of what popular perceptions might be, corruption
does not necessarily benefit the economic elites, and investing in judicial accountability may
in fact skew the income distribution. Rather, the findings are compatible with the
replacement-theory prediction that elites will allow others to benefit when they fear that their
power will otherwise risk being eroded (which is plausibly the case in highly corrupt
societies). It is also compatible with the elites having an altruistic streak; with non-elites
being more successful at using corruption to their advantage than elites; and with the notion
that market outcomes may simply turn out to benefit the non-elites, irrespective of what the
corrupt instigators had aimed at accomplishing.
We control for political institutions, since they have been shown to affect corruption
and can be expected to affect the distributions of income and consumption as well.
Importantly, we perform an analysis where corruption and judicial accountability are
interacted with the stability of political institutions, thereby testing a version of Mancur
Olson’s institutional sclerosis thesis. We find that the associations between corruption and
income inequality, and between judicial accountability and income inequality, are similar
over the stability of political institutions, while consumption inequality is reduced the longer
such institutions have been firmly in place, suggesting that those that benefit from corruption
(the four lower consumption quintiles) and judicial accountability (the top quintile) are even
better able to extract favors the more stable the institutional landscape. We can, nevertheless,
only claim that the increase in the associations over time is causal.
As indicated by our theoretical approach, the relationship between corruption and
inequality could be either of a positive or a negative kind. Hence, it is not surprising that the
existing literature contains findings of both kinds. Some previous studies have, like us, found
a negative relationship, but primarily for Latin America (Dobson and Ramlogan-Dobson,
2010; Andres and Ramlogan-Dobson, 2011). We are the first to identify a negative
relationship for a broad cross-country sample. However, there are also studies indicating a
positive relationship. Gupta et al. (2002) identify such a relationship, for some 38 countries
6. 6
over the period 1980–1997. Gyimah-Brempong (2002) likewise finds a positive relationship
for Africa. Relatedly, Bjørnskov and Justesen (2014) uncover, also for an African sample,
that the poor are obliged to pay bribes to officials to a larger extent than others, which in
principle is compatible with corruption benefitting the poor more than others.
What we add to the existing literature is a new, open-ended theoretical framework; a
much more comprehensive dataset –we look at 145 countries over the period 1960–2014 and
thus capture both a much more diverse group of countries and a much longer time period than
any previous study; and we control for political institutions and interact their stability with
corruption, which allows us to make direct causal claims.
This study matters in at least two ways. First, it brings new knowledge to bear on the
important issue of what the consequences of corruption and judicial accountability are. If one
dislikes inequality, our study suggests that corruption may not only have negative effects, and
that judicial accountability may entail negative effects, which suggests that combatting
corruption and strengthening judicial accountability may have unintended consequences.
Second, it furthermore sheds new light on what determines income and consumption
inequality, not only showing that corruption and judicial quality are important explanatory
factors but also that political institutions – and not least their stability – matter. This should
provide useful insights for those working in policy areas where corruption is present.
2. THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
(a) The overall framework
Our theoretical framework is inspired by the model relating political institutions,
resources and power to economic institutions and outcomes in Acemoglu et al. (2005) and is
illustrated in Figure 1. Our ultimate variables of interest concern the distribution of resources
(in our case income) and the distribution of their usage (in our case consumption). What
determines such distributions? In our framework, this outcome, as well as other economic
outcomes (such as GDP growth rates), are shaped by the economic institutions and policies in
place. By economic institutions we mean the generally stable framework of legal rules that
ideally define and uphold private property rights and other aspects of formalized economic
life, such as the protection of contracts and the enforcement of rules against theft, fraud etc.
7. 7
By economic policies we mean the typically more transient set of political decisions that
concern specific aspects of economic life – such as taxes, regulation, subsidies and transfers
(cf. Williamson, 2010).
Insert Figure 1 about here
Economic institutions affect economic outcomes by providing predictability in
economic exchange (North, 1990). Economic actors know that it is very likely that people
will behave well and be trustworthy if the legal system is considered fair and effective, and if
actors within it can be held accountable, which stimulates economic exchange; and they will
have an incentive to engage in productive and innovative activities if they can be reasonably
certain that their belongings will not be taken away from them (especially not in an arbitrary
manner). Economic policies likewise affect economic outcomes by affecting the incentive
structure through the way it changes the relative payoffs of different activities. For example,
if government is large and has introduced very high and progressive marginal tax rates as
well as wasteful expenditure programs, this is likely to stifle productive activities and
stimulate unproductive ones, with negative growth effects (Bergh and Henrekson, 2011;
Bjørnskov and Foss, 2016).
In our case, we are primarily concerned with the distribution of resources and their
usage. Whatever resources are produced in an economy will belong to different people, and
they will be used to whatever ends their owners prioritize. Both institutions and policies
influence the overall distribution of, e.g., income, wealth and consumption. Institutions do so
by upholding the formal structure of the rule of law, which allows the market-economic
process to operate, with “spontaneous” distributional outcomes (for gross values). Policies do
so more directly by affecting what economic activities are undertaken, how they are
undertaken and to what extent they are undertaken (all of which affects the distribution of
gross values) and through redistribution (which in addition affects net values).6
How the net
incomes are used is then a matter of personal preference: Some part will be used for
consumption, another for saving, etc., with resulting inequalities in these variables.
We are getting closer to the role of corruption and judicial accountability by asking:
What, in turn, determines economic institutions and policies? The answer is power – of two
6
For an analysis of how institutions and policies affect income inequality through the market process and
through redistribution, see Berggren (1999).
8. 8
kinds. On the one hand, there are actors who make political decisions, including legislative
ones, in accordance with the political institutions. There is almost always a constitution that
specifies these rules of the political game: How the head of state is appointed, how the head
of government is selected, how the legislature is organized and how the legislators are
elected, what the role of judicial review is, etc. People who hold office in accordance with
these formal rules execute what can be called de jure power: power assigned to them by dint
of their having a formal position that comes with an authority to act in certain (but not other)
ways. Thus, they are typically able to change economic institutions and policies if they follow
the procedural criteria laid out by the rules.
On the other hand, there are those who have de facto power. Such power comes with
resources, and it may be executed in various ways. For example, people may use the media to
sway public opinion; they may instigate demonstrations and even revolts; and they may –
which is what primarily interests us here – engage in rent-seeking and use corruption to
achieve their goals (Congleton and Hillman, 2015). Clearly, then, resources can bring de
facto political power through actions that influence those with de jure political power, such
that they devise economic institutions and policies in a manner that is in line with the
preferences of those with resources, one instance of which is corruption in the form of “grand
corruption” or “state capture” (Aidt, 2003; Knack, 2007). Resources are offered to a
politician, bureaucrat or jurist, in exchange for some reform of institutions or policies or some
promise not to enforce existing rules as they pertain to some activity.7
Yet, for any given set of legislation and regulation, corruption can also affect the
actual implementation of de jure decisions when such decisions create a sufficient incentive
to avoid regulations (Aidt, 2003). Contrary to state capture – i.e., when corruption and
lobbying affects policy decisions – “petty” corruption can undermine the effectiveness of
such policies when firms and individuals can bribe their way around them. As stressed by
Bjørnskov (2011), this can under some conditions imply that economic activity, which would
7
The degree to which corruption is used depends on many things – see, e.g., Aidt (2003) and Pellegrini (2011b)
– not least on the political institutions themselves (as mentioned in the Introduction), with transparency,
accountability and division of power as antidotes. One way to see it is as a trade-off on the margin for
politicians, following Peltzman (1976), where satisfying voters is one method to reach the goal of de jure
political power but where satisfying interest groups, possibly through corruption, is another, generally disliked
by voters if they find out about it. Hence the tradeoff, with less corruption the easier it is for voters to find out
about it.
9. 9
otherwise be subject to regulations, goes entirely unregistered and thus does not appear in
official income statistics.
Lastly, there is a third set of institutions, the quality of which is of importance:
judicial institutions. We take these to be approximately exogenous to the daily political
process, and as such, they are able to influence decision-making through two avenues. First,
the quality of the judicial institutions affects the scope of corruption (which is denoted by the
arrow in Figure 1 showing an effect on the execution of de facto power). Second, this quality
also constrains the design of economic institutions and policies, towards generality
(Buchanan and Congleton, 1998). However, the legal system itself is not immune to
corruption, which is where judicial accountability comes in. Corruption may be used to
influence legal practitioners in various ways, such that the enforcement of rules is becoming
laxer; and legal practitioners, such as judges, can themselves engage in corrupt practices so as
to circumvent the rules and behave in ways that benefit them without being disciplined for it.
Hence the arrow from de facto power to judicial institutions. As noted, the arrow from
judicial institutions to economic institutions and policies denotes the importance of legal
institutions for what economic decisions that are taken – but the generality that they should
ideally uphold in economic decision-making may be undermined if corruption has reduced
judicial accountability (taking away the constraining function of the legal system). This
leaves room for special interests (some of whom can be judges).
Against this schematic background, the main question of interest to us is what the
effect of corruption in politics and the judiciary in the end is on income and consumption
inequality, i.e., how the influence that comes with transfers of benefits to those with de jure
power translates into income and consumption effects over the whole distributions.
(b) Corruption, judicial accountability and income inequality
Starting with income inequality, one needs to distinguish between gross and net
income. In the former case, the distribution is the result of market outcomes (in turn shaped
by individual preferences and the incentives provided by economic institutions and policies),
while in the latter case it is also the result of taxes and transfers, i.e., redistribution. If
corruption increases (decreases) gross-income inequality this is because economic institutions
and policies (other than redistribution) have changed or been circumvented as the result of the
corruption, such that groups with higher (lower) incomes have benefitted more than others in
the market process. If corruption increases (decreases) net-income inequality this is either
10. 10
because economic institutions and policies (other than redistribution) have changed or been
circumvented as the result of the corruption, such that groups with higher (lower) incomes
have benefitted more than others in the market process; or because those involved in
corruption have been favored more than others by changes to the redistributive system.
This implies either that those groups who benefitted more were more effective at
using corruption, or that those who were most effective at using corruption, if not those who
benefitted more, (consciously or unconsciously) helped others benefit more than themselves.
This reasoning can be connected to two theoretical contributions with more precise
predictions. First, Alesina and Angeletos (2005) model a setting where corruption is used and
widely regarded as unjust, which leads to demands for and policies that entail more
redistribution. This is one mechanism that could explain why corruption results in lower net-
income inequality: policymakers are corrupt but also sensitive to popular sentiments and
therefore willing to appease the voters. Second, Acemoglu and Robinson (2006) model a
“replacement effect”, where political leaders block institutional, technological and economic
progress since they fear being replaced by others who would benefit from it and challenge
their political power. In our case, a similar logic could be applied. In a setting where
corruption is high it could be that elites perceive they are in a contested situation where others
can overtake their influence by pooling resources – unless they ensure that the non-elites
benefit and feel reasonably content. Thus, they can give up certain gains from corruption, and
perhaps even accept some financial losses, if this solidifies their de facto political power over
the long term.
With regard to judicial accountability and income inequality, we propose two links.
First, low judicial accountability implies corruption in the judicial sphere as well as the
absence of protection against corruption in the political sphere, and hence that corruption is
more prevalent. This allows for a link between corruption and income inequality, as sketched
out above in this section. To the extent that low judicial accountability is an indicator of
judicial institutions functioning poorly or lacking entirely, it could furthermore entail a
disadvantageous situation for the worst-off in society, e.g., if the de facto property of poor
people is not protected by anything but force, preventing the relatively poor from investing
and bettering themselves (de Soto, 1989). Second, high judicial accountability indicates the
absence of corruption among judges and a potentially effective constraint on corruption
elsewhere in the public sector. In this case, there is a link to income inequality in the sense
that whatever the economic institutions and policies are, they are upheld by the legal system.
Whether the economic institutions and policies give rise to high or low inequality, this effect
11. 11
is strengthened by the presence of judicial accountability. In other words, judicial
accountability helps the state to enforce legislation and policies of any kind, including
policies with substantial costs to some or all groups in society. As stressed by Voigt (2013),
the full effects of good judicial institutions rest on the quality of the actual legislation, which
implies that such institutions can contribute to upholding economic outcomes that are
considered undesirable by many. Corruption that worsen aspects of judicial quality, such as
judicial accountability, might then undermine such outcomes. For example, it thus remains an
option that good judicial institutions, with high accountability, may “fossilize” the
distribution of property if the country lacks well-functioning market institutions within which
citizens can also freely trade and transfer property.
(c) Corruption and consumption inequality
Let us next consider consumption inequality. Consumption is a function of available
resources and personal preferences. Hence, consumption inequality is arguably directly
related to net-income inequality: People who have low net incomes cannot consume very
much in absolute terms, and vice versa. Still, the share of income going to consumption tends
to be higher for low-income earners since life’s necessities “have to” be consumed by
everyone. But consumption is also related to the relative preference for consumption and
saving – even if one has a high net income, one may wish to save a larger share than those
who have lower income (which also seems to be the case; see Dynan et al., 2004). This
option points at a possibility that consumption inequality is lower than net-income inequality,
which is also confirmed in empirical studies for several countries (see note 4 above).
In any case, the issue here is one of linking corruption to consumption inequality. The
reasoning is basically the same as that for net-income inequality: The factors that affect that
outcome variable are likely to affect consumption inequality as well, although imperfectly.
What needs to be added, we suggest, are four potential links between corruption and
consumption inequality that adds more precise predictions about the relationship: 1) the
choice between consuming and saving due to the effects of corruption on taxation and the
influence of both corruption and judicial accountability on the ability to circumvent taxes and
financial regulations; 2) the effects of gaining access to goods brought illegally into the
country, i.e., when corrupt practices are used to circumvent external barriers in the form of
tariffs and non-tariff trade barriers or when they are not enforced by a non-accountable
judicial system; 3) the ability to divert consumption to other countries as a way to avoid
12. 12
potentially corrupt transactions; and 4) the overall effects of corruption on the price structure
when corrupt activities enable individuals to circumvent internal barriers such as price
controls and other domestic regulation.
With respect to the first mechanism, one factor of importance is taxation, particularly
capital taxes and consumption taxes. How a given net income is divided is partly determined
by post-tax variables: the higher the capital taxes and the lower the consumption taxes, the
larger a share people can be expected to consume out of their budget. Corruption and judicial
quality can affect both the formal properties of the tax system but also how easy it is to
circumvent the rules. While people strong in resources can probably exercise more power vis-
à-vis the political decision-makers and bureaucrats, it remains possible that people with less
resources can be more skillful, e.g., through small businesses, to evade the taxes in place.
Corruption may therefore lead to tax evasion from both the relatively rich and the relatively
poor, although we note that evasion through operating in the underground economy is a more
likely strategy for the poor (Bjørnskov, 2011).8
Another factor regarding the choice of whether to save and consume in relation to
corruption is safety in saving, which has to do with legal institutions and their enforcement. If
people suspect that savings may be confiscated or not protected well, they will tend to
consume relatively more. This perception of safety can differ between consumption groups –
not least in highly corrupt societies (Sonin, 2003). There, one would expect that it is easier
for people with substantial resources to protect their savings than for people with few
resources.
With regard to the second mechanism, corruption may affect the price structure in a
pro-poor direction by enabling increased international trade. When, for example, prices on
certain goods are higher than in neighboring countries, petty corruption at the border will
enable smuggling. As price differences on bulk goods can be sizeable due to trade barriers
(cf. Golub and Mbaye, 2009), corruption therefore effectively reduces the prices that people
pay on ordinary goods (Schwarz, 2012). As such goods constitute a substantial share of the
total consumption basket of poor people, these price changes allow a larger consumption
increase among poorer segments of society and will thereby be associated with a decrease in
8
It should be noted that if evasion happens through underground production, the income can be almost perfectly
hidden from the tax authorities and thus kept out of official statistics. It is far more likely that at least a
substantial part of individuals’ consumption out of income from the underground economy becomes registered
when individuals consume goods and services produced in the official economy.
13. 13
consumption inequality. Our third mechanism is related to these types of effects, as in
particular richer consumers may be able to divert part of their consumption to other countries
as a way to avoid potentially corrupt transactions. Consumption diversion may also occur as a
reaction to the price changes that corrupt non-tariff barriers induce in the domestic economy.
Diversion implies that the official consumption statistics for a country may not capture the
effects of corruption very precisely for consumer groups that engage in it.
As for the final mechanism, policies that for example imply price controls will have
similar effects as trade barriers. While Brazil and Chile implemented very similar price
controls in the early 1970s, they had different economic consequences. As bureaucrats
supposed to enforce the price controls could be easily bribed in Brazil but not in Chile, the
controls had strongly adverse consequences for the Chilean poor but not those in Brazil (Leff
and Heidenheimer, 2017). Actual consumption inequality therefore increased in Chile while
the intended effects were offset by corruption in Brazil.9
Similar effects may also pertain
when corruption, at times due to low judicial accountability, allows individuals and other
firms to circumvent domestic regulation that create or enforce monopolies (Stigler, 1970).
(d) Corruption, judicial accountability and inequality: Expected signs
Will, then, gross-income inequality, net-income inequality and consumption
inequality rise or fall as a result of corruption? Many might think it unambiguously clear that
each measure will rise. But our theoretical framework paints a more nuanced and complex
picture – certainly allowing for such an outcome but not necessarily implying it. It all
depends on how people with de facto power use their power and how they can use it, which is
in turn largely determined by political institutions and their stability. This will shape
economic institutions and policies in certain ways, which contribute to determining both
income inequality and consumption inequality. Those with much resources can try to
influence the process in their favor through corrupt means; but they could also benefit others
by instigating market processes that (intentionally or unintentionally) shape the gross-income
distribution in ways that favor people with small resources, by influencing the redistributive
9
Also see Bergh and Nilsson (2014) for a related finding. They show that the poor can benefit from price
changes induced by higher income inequality. The idea is that more poor consumers lead to cheap products
becoming more profitable and hence more supplied. They confirm a negative relation between income
inequality and the price of inferior goods.
14. 14
system (intentionally or unintentionally) such that the net-income distribution becomes more
equal and also by influencing the factors that determine whether to save or consume
(intentionally or unintentionally) in such a manner that those with small budgets fare better.
These outcomes in favor of other groups could be accidental or motivated by altruistic
concerns or by insights that “too much inequality” is bad, in the long-term, for overall social
cohesion and the society in which they live and, according to the replacement-effect logic, for
their own power base. In addition, it should not be ruled out that groups with small resources
can sometimes be successful in influencing political decision-makers as well – maybe by
contributing their votes and time to the politicians, but also, especially in local settings, by
bribing officials to the benefit of, typically, small businesses.
Next, what might the sign of the effect of judicial accountability on our inequality
measures be? As we clarified in the preceding section, the links are of at least two kinds.
First, if judicial accountability is low, we basically have a setting with corruption, and the
reasoning concerning how corruption affects the inequalities under consideration applies.
Second, if judicial accountability is high, we have a situation which arguably is characterized
by low corruption, but the judicial institutions solidify whatever economic institutions and
policies that are decided upon, with their respective distributional consequences. Hence,
while we can delineate these “structural” links, on the basis of theory, the sign could be either
positive or negative.
(e) The role of the stability of political institutions
Lastly, whatever the effect of corruption and judicial accountability on inequality, we
propose that the stability of political institutions can influence the effects in such a way as to
strengthen them. This proposition stems from Olson (1982) and his idea of institutional
sclerosis, suggesting that sets of rules that are in place over long periods of time allow for
interest groups or corrupting agents to better develop and sustain their activities vis-à-vis the
political decision-makers. Institutional stability for example lowers the costs associated with
rent-seeking, as agents form stable relationships and modes of operation form, and special
interests capture regulatory agencies (Stigler, 1970). Hence, when considering a potential
moderating effect, we expect a reinforcement: Those that are favored by corruption (in the
distribution of income or consumption) are even more favored the more stable the political
institutions are. Olson’s theory of institutional sclerosis therefore also implies that the
15. 15
consequences of corruption will be increasing in regime stability and most severe in societies
with strongly entrenched institutions.
3. THE DATA AND EMPIRICAL APPROACH
The data we use cover 145 countries from all over the world for the period 1960–
2014 for which we have data on corruption, judicial accountability and the income
distribution. Our dependent variables are income and consumption inequality, primarily
measured as the shares of total (wage as well as non-wage) incomes obtained per quintile and
as the share of all consumption spent per quintile, but also measured, in a follow-up analysis,
in the form of Gini coefficients and the Theil index (for a presentation of the latter, see
Conceição and Ferreira, 2010). The income inequality measures capture gross incomes (i.e.,
incomes before taxes and transfers), which implies that redistribution is ruled out as a
mechanism through which corruption can affect the studied income distribution. The source
is the Göttingen Consumption and Income Project (GCIP, 2018), which provides both
comprehensive coverage of multiple inequality measures as well as data on decile and
quintile income shares.
Our main explanatory variables are corruption, judicial accountability, as well as
political institutions and their stability. We derive our measure of corruption from the V-Dem
dataset, where we also get a measure of de facto judicial accountability (Coppedge et al.,
2017a). The V-Dem corruption index is an aggregate of measures of six types of corruption
in political and judicial institutions, distinguishing between bribery and embezzlement in
executive, legislative and judicial processes. Its intention is to capture both “corruption aimed
and influencing law making and that affecting implementation” (Coppedge et al., 2017a, p.
72).10
The V-Dem corruption measure therefore conceptually captures the type of problems
outlined in our theoretical considerations.
10
For a full description of the V-Dem measurement methodology, see Coppedge et al. (2017b). The V-Dem
measure appears very similar to standard alternatives, and for example correlates at about 0.9 with the
Transparency International (2018) Corruption Perceptions Index. Admittedly, this type of perceptions-based
measure has faced critique, e.g., by Donchev and Ujhelyi (2014), who claim that it is biased downwards and that
large countries are penalized since it measures absolute corruption perceptions, and by Ko and Samajdar (2010),
who point out the risk of selection bias, longitudinal sensitivity and measurement errors. However, there are also
16. 16
The judicial accountability index from V-Dem is constructed in the same way and
intended to capture the likelihood that “judges [who] are found responsible for serious
misconduct […] are […] removed from their posts or otherwise disciplined” (Coppedge et
al., 2017a, p. 211). One reason for adding this index is to alleviate a known problem in
corruption research: that institutional quality could affect inequality in several other ways
than corruption, not least through affecting the degree of protection of private property rights
(e.g., Dong and Torgler, 2010). Yet, as judicial accountability is nevertheless associated with
better control of corruption at all levels of society, it is therefore strongly (and negatively)
correlated with corruption. Not controlling for a factor such as judicial accountability would
therefore cause such effects to be captured by our measure of corruption, and vice versa,
which would therefore lead to potentially biased estimates. While its inclusion therefore
allows us to estimate effects of, e.g., protection of property rights, it also ensures us that we
are capturing approximately the full effects of corruption, and no consequences of spuriously
correlated factors.11
We match these data to information on political institutions from Bjørnskov and Rode
(in press). These characteristics first include whether the country has a single-party system, is
an electoral autocracy – i.e. that it has a multi-party system but where elections are not free
and fair and thus cannot lead to a change of government – or if it is a full democracy; the
baseline category is countries without elections. From the same source, we obtain information
on whether or not the parliament is bicameral and whether elections are based on proportional
voting or some form of first-past-the-post system. Finally, we capture the stability of political
institutions through a measure counting how long ago a major change in political institutions
occurred. We define such a change as either a successful coup, the implementation of a new
defenders of the measure, most notably Kaufmann et al. (2007) and Uslaner (2017). We tend to agree with the
defenders. The measure is not without its imperfections, but it seems valid overall and better than available
alternatives for a large cross-country sample such as ours. This conclusion obtains support from Gutmann et al.
(2018), who document a rather clear positive correlation between perceptions of corruption and experience of
corruption, using microdata.
11
Since corruption is causally affected by judicial accountability (Bjørnskov, 2011), it is possible to imagine a
mechanism in which judicial accountability affects corruption that in turn affects the distribution of income or
consumption. By directly controlling for judicial accountability, we may underestimate the full effects of such
mechanisms, and the estimated effects of corruption in the following can therefore best be thought of as lower-
bound estimates of the full effect but correct unbiased estimates of the direct effects.
17. 17
or strongly amended constitution, or a peaceful regime transition. In our data, this latter
category mainly consists of democratizations.
We follow the general literature on income inequality back to Kuznets (1955) by first
adding the logarithm to real GDP per capita and its square. We also include the trade share of
GDP, the share of government consumption and the price level of capital relative to the US;
the data are all from the Penn World Tables, mark 9 (Feenstra et al., 2015). Finally, we add
dummies for whether successful and failed coups occurred in a country; these data are from
Bjørnskov and Rode (in press). We summarize all data in Table 1.
Insert Table 1 about here
In the following, we estimate a panel with yearly observations and control variables
lagged one year, using OLS with two-way fixed effects. As such, the inclusion of year and
country fixed effects takes care of all changes due either to common international trends and
potential changes in measurement methodology as well as time-invariant country-specific
factors. We note that we cannot fully establish causality in the relation between corruption,
judicial accountability and inequality, as several mechanisms exist that could create reverse
causality (e.g. Jong-sung and Khagram, 2005). We therefore follow Nizalova and
Murtazashvili (2016) in adding an interaction term between corruption and the (logarithm to)
time since the last major institutional change. As long as the time since the last change is
exogenous to corruption, causality can be directly inferable from the effect heterogeneity (the
interaction term).12
In other words, even though we cannot claim that the association that we
observe between corruption and inequality around regime transitions is causal in a particular
direction, any additional effect that arises over time must be so. Apart from being able to
establish causality under such conditions, we also emphasize that an increasing effect of
corruption after regime change is not only fully consistent with Olson’s (1982) theory of
institutional sclerosis, but also a logical consequence of the mechanisms behind sclerosis. Our
causal identification strategy is thus based on a particular theoretical expectation.
12
This assumption implies that our causal strategy is only valid under the assumption that subsequent
institutional stability after an institutional change is not affected by the initial distribution of consumption or
income. While one might to set up a theoretical model in which distributional aspects affect institutional
stability, the association depicted by Figure A1 in the Appendix indicates that this is not likely to be an actual
problem.
18. 18
4. RESULTS
We begin by presenting the baseline findings in Tables 2 and 3, in the form of effects
of corruption and judicial accountability, and other explanatory variables, on quintile shares
of the distribution of income and consumption, respectively. In both tables, columns 1–5
report the results for the first to fifth quintile for the full sample, while columns 6–10 report
results for a subsample where we exclude all observations from non-democracies.
Insert Table 2 about here
We first observe significant evidence of a Kuznets Curve, as GDP per capita exhibits
a clear hump-shaped relation with inequality. In the full sample, the top point of the Kuznets
Curve for the income distribution is approximately 4,000 USD for the first quintile and 6,000
USD for the fifth quintile, while the equivalent top points for the democratic subsample are
5,000 and 8,000 USD. The corresponding top points for the consumption distribution (in
Table 3) are around 6,000 and 9,000 USD in the full sample and the democratic subsample,
respectively. We also observe a more equal distribution of income associated with faster
population growth. In addition, international trade is associated with more inequality as more
trade can be linked to a concentration of income and consumption in the top quintile.
Moreover, while a larger size of government appears to be associated with a more equal
distribution of income in Table 2, it is associated with a less equal distribution of
consumption in Table 3. With respect to the last economic factor, investment prices, we find
mixed evidence that it mainly affects the fourth quintile, i.e., what may be thought of as the
income share of the upper middle class.
Insert Table 3 about here
Turning to the association of the inequality measures with political institutions,
single-party regimes appear to be associated with a concentration of incomes in the top
quintile. Yet, focusing on consumption, we find that all party-based regimes have more equal
consumption distributions than countries without elections, and that full democracies on
19. 19
average exhibit the most equal consumption distribution. We also observe that bicameral
regimes tend to have income distributions skewed, to the benefit of the top quintile, but
consumption distributions that, if anything, are slightly skewed towards the fourth quintile.
Proportional voting systems are also in general associated with more skewed distributions of
income and consumption, although the effects on consumption inequality are curiously driven
entirely by the non-democratic observations. Yet, temporarily ridding a country of such
institutions through a successful coup appears to equalize consumption opportunities in most
countries.13
Finally, turning to the main aim of this paper, we find throughout Tables 2 and 3 that
stronger judicial accountability is associated with substantially larger top quintile shares,
while political corruption is associated with smaller top quintile shares, and particularly so in
democracies. Comparing the results for the distribution of income (in Table 2) and
consumption (Table 3), we also observe that these associations are significantly stronger for
consumption than for income. Hence, what might be called unfair procedures – corruption
and deviations from judicial accountability – are related to distributional outcomes that are
adverse to the economic elites and beneficial for the relatively worse-off!
Yet, as noted in Section 3, we cannot claim that these associations are causal in a
particular direction. In Table 4, we therefore introduce an interaction with the logarithm to
the time since a large institutional change occurred; we illustrate the heterogeneity in Figure
2. The basis for this exercise, as outlined in Section 2, is Olson’s (1982) theory of
institutional sclerosis: when institutional structures become very stable, rent-seeking in the
form of both lobbying and corruption becomes cheaper and special interest groups become an
integral part of political and judicial life. Any causal effect of political corruption and judicial
accountability will therefore be likely to increase over time as the institutional structure
becomes entrenched.
Insert Table 4 about here
Insert Figure 2 about here
Insert Figure 3 about here
13
Although previous research has not explored the apparently equalizing effects of successful coups, the effect
may not be entirely unexpected. The purpose of many coups is to remove an entrenched political elite that in
most cases enjoy substantial rents. If that happens, we would expect to observe a decline, although perhaps only
temporarily, in the income or consumption share of the elite.
20. 20
This is exactly what we observe in Table 4 (which includes an identical baseline
specification as previous tables and which is based on our democratic subsample). We
illustrate the findings in Figure 2, which depicts the marginal effect of corruption on the share
pertaining to the bottom quintile of income and consumption and Figure 3, showing the
marginal effect of judicial accountability on the top quintiles of the income and consumption
distributions. We refrain from plotting the rest of the associations as they either are
insignificant in Table 4 or subsequently prove to be fragile (see Tables A2 and A3 in the
Appendix).
While the estimates in Table 4 and the illustration in Figure 2 seem to show
heterogeneity over time in the case of income, those results prove to be fragile in our ensuing
regional jackknife analysis (see below), and for income we consequently cannot claim any
causal evidence. However, the effects of corruption on the distribution of consumption are
clearly increasing in the time since the last major institutional change. After about ten years,
the estimate on the bottom quintile of the distribution of consumption is approximately .012 –
calculated as the “pure” estimate plus the interaction term times the log to 10 – and
significantly different from the estimate at time zero. We observe quite similar effects of
judicial accountability that do not appear heterogeneous for the distribution of income, but
clearly are so for the distribution of consumption. The heterogeneity is evident in Figure 3
where the association between judicial accountability is clearly zero for the top income
quintile, but strongly increasing over time for the top consumption quintile.
So while we cannot claim that the full estimates of corruption – the pure estimate of
corruption plus the interaction effect – or that the full estimates of judicial accountability can
be thought of as causal, we can still make causal claims. Because the time since the last major
institutional change is exogenous to the quintile consumption shares, we can with statistical
confidence say that the increases in the estimates that occur over the time since the last major
institutional change causally affect the distribution of consumption. For example, the
estimate of corruption of .008 on the bottom consumption quintile may or may not be causal,
but the significant increase of an additional .004 after ten years can be interpreted as evidence
of a causal effect of corruption.
Moreover, we are confident that the mechanisms through which this effect runs must
be distinct from any mechanisms affecting the distribution of income. Because we include
judicial accountability and find a similar pattern of heterogeneity in the estimates of judicial
accountability, which appears somewhat stronger for the consumption distribution, we can be
21. 21
quite certain that the identified corruption effects do not merely reflect consequences of other
parts of the institutional framework such as the quality of judicial institutions or the shape of
political institutions, which would be captured by the inclusion of judicial accountability and
democracy. Consistent with our theoretical considerations, we therefore find that institutional
features not related to the control of corruption also affect the distribution of income and
consumption in the longer run – judicial accountability also appears important (Dreher and
Schneider, 2010; Bjørnskov, 2011).
So far, the results show substantial support for equalizing effects of political
corruption on consumption, and most likely that judicial accountability has the opposite
effect. Yet, the option remains that these findings are specific to exploring quintile shares of
the distribution of income and consumption, and that they overall findings are driven by
specific countries or small groups of countries.
We therefore perform three sets of sensitivity analyses. We first re-estimate our main
findings using two measures of the overall shape of the consumption distribution: Gini
coefficients and the Theil index. We report the findings in Table A1 in the Appendix, using
the full sample in columns 1 and 2 and the democratic subsample in columns 3 and 4.
The overall findings are similar to those in Tables 2–4 with evidence for a Kuznets
Curve, population effects and a positive association with the size of government. We also
observe more evidence for the equalizing effects of coups and consequences of democratic
political institutions. Most importantly, we can confirm a negative association between
corruption and consumption inequality, with substantial evidence for heterogeneous effects of
corruption and judicial accountability across the distribution of consumption. The strongly
significant interaction terms in the lower panel of Table A1 show that the effects of
corruption and judicial accountability are increasing in institutional stability, and a
comparison between estimates using the full sample and the democratic subsample provide
clear indications that these effects are stronger in democratic societies. Our main findings
therefore do not appear to be specific to a particular way of measuring consumption
inequality.
Second, we have performed two jackknife exercises to investigate whether there are
particular regions in the world that drive the results and whether they can be associated with
particular decades. The regions that we included are the West, South East Asia, the rest of
Asia, North Africa and the Middle East, Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and the
Caribbean, and the Pacific. The results, reported in Table A2 in the Appendix, show the
particular results for effects of corruption on the bottom quintile of the consumption
22. 22
distribution, and effects of judicial accountability for the top quintile of the consumption
distribution, that are statistically robust and not driven by single regions or decades. A further
country jackknife (not shown) furthermore support these two particular results. There is,
however, one exception: The heterogeneity over time we identified in Figure 2 for the
marginal effects of corruption on the income share of the bottom quintile is not robust to our
region jackknife test: the distribution changes shape when excluding Asia, and the differences
over time become insignificant when excluding the Western countries.
A further worry could be that some of our findings are driven by observations that are
interpolated in the GCIP dataset. We deal with this problem in Table A3 in the Appendix,
where we delete all obviously interpolated data, which we identify when income or
consumption shares do not change at all from year to year, or if the changes perfectly follow
a linear change (i.e., a linear interpolation) between years. As is evident in the table, this final
test reaffirms our main findings for corruption (the bottom quintile) and judicial
accountability (the top quintile). On this basis, we conclude that the main results are
statistically robust, and also that the size of the estimates appear relatively stable across tests.
Finally, the results may reflect purely distributional changes or differential growth
performance across quintiles. We address this concern in Table A4 in the Appendix, where
we instead of consumption shares use the log of absolute consumption levels. However, here
we must emphasize that our causal strategy is less likely to be valid.14
We nevertheless find a
fairly similar pattern for the top quintile but generally statistically insignificant results for the
rest. As such, although causality is a main concern with absolute levels, the slight indications
of heterogeneity across quintiles may be taken to suggest that our results are not likely to be
driven by pure growth differences.
5. CONCLUDING REMARKS
In our desire to pinpoint how corruption and judicial accountability affect inequality,
we have looked at a large cross-country sample covering more than half a century. Perhaps
14
While we argue that the identifying assumption that the stability of institutional changes is approximately
orthogonal to the distribution of income or consumption, we cannot make the same claim when it comes to
absolute income or consumption levels. The reason is that institutional stability is known to be more likely in
relatively rich countries.
23. 23
surprisingly, our results reveal that corruption is related to both income and consumption
inequality in a negative way and that judicial accountability is related to these inequality
indicators in a positive way. This suggests that the relative position of economic elites
worsens with corruption, which in turn indicates either that other parts of the income and
consumption distributions are better able to take advantage of corruption, e.g., by evading
regulations, or that the elites, either consciously or unconsciously, use their de facto power to
favor others more than themselves (perhaps in a preemptive way to retain power).
Conversely, judicial quality appears to protect the consumption shares of the economic elite,
indicating that having accountable judiciaries may serve to fossilize an unequal distribution
of consumption in society.
For average effects of corruption or judicial accountability we cannot claim any
causal inference. However, we follow recent studies in establishing causality by exploring
effect heterogeneity. Interacting corruption and judicial accountability with the time since the
last major change in political institutions allows us to test a version of Olson’s institutional
sclerosis thesis, which also allows us to draw partial causal inference. Assuming that the time
since the last major change is exogenous to inequality – an assumption that we cannot test but
which the available data, as shown in Figure A1 in the Appendix, strongly indicate – we find
that the effects of corruption and judicial accountability are increasing in this factor for
consumption inequality. In other words, we observe that corruption contributes to a more
equal distribution of consumption and that judicial accountability contributes to a less equal
distribution the longer the political institutions have been stable. These implications are
independent of the specific way we measure inequality and is valid across time, regions and
the specific way we measure inequality.
We see this study as a contribution to the literature on the consequences of corruption
and institutional quality, and it also sheds new light on the determinants of inequality. It
suggests that although corruption may violate norms of just conduct and give rise to other
detrimental outcomes, it need not necessarily worsen inequalities in society. Moreover,
judicial quality, despite its positive connotations, may indeed do the opposite. Yet, we must
emphasize that both corruption and judicial accountability also affect long-run growth such
that investing in accountability and combatting corruption would lead to absolute advances
for the entire society. In addition, both factors could in principle affect the precision of
national accounts data if, for example, the relatively rich either avoid corruption by diverting
consumption to other countries, or use corrupt practices to hide both income and consumption
from regular measurement. Our findings nevertheless seem to us important to take into
24. 24
careful account when considering policy measures that try to combat corruption and
strengthen judicial accountability: possible side effects along distributional margins may need
to be counteracted in a conscious way.
APPENDIX
Insert Table A1 here
Insert Table A2 here
Insert Table A3 here
Insert Figure A1 here
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TABLES AND FIGURES
Table 1. Descriptive statistics
Mean Standard deviation Observations
Income quintile 1 0.049 0.027 8,839
Income quintile 2 0.089 0.033 8,839
Income quintile 3 0.133 0.034 8,839
Income quintile 4 0.199 0.027 8,839
Income quintile 5 0.529 0.117 8,839
Consumption quintile 1 0.065 0.019 8,839
Consumption quintile 2 0.106 0.022 8,839
Consumption quintile 3 0.149 0.021 8,839
Consumption quintile 4 0.212 0.017 8,839
Consumption quintile 5 0.466 0.075 8,839
Gini coefficient 0.391 0.085 8,839
Theil index 0.272 0.145 8,839
Log GDP 8.635 1.173 7,579
Log population 1.956 1.782 7,579
Trade share 0.478 0.520 7,579
Government size 0.196 0.106 7,579
Investment price 1.356 0.995 7,579
Coup, success 0.022 0.152 8,739
Coup, failed 0.026 0.163 8,739
Single party regime 0.201 0.401 8,672
Electoral autocracy 0.239 0.427 8,672
Democracy 0.454 0.498 8,672
Bicameral system 0.419 0.497 7,386
Proportional voting 0.439 0.496 7,087
Large institutional change 0.115 0.319 8,784
Log time since change 2.141 1.184 8,704
Judicial accountability 2.019 0.955 7,597
Political corruption 0.479 0.276 7587
41. 41
Table A4. Results, consumption distribution, log absolute consumption levels
Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4 Q 5
Full baseline included
Judicial
accountability
.000
(.008)
.002
(.007)
.002
(.007)
.003
(.007)
-.013
(.009)
Political corruption .003
(.029)
-.010
(.026)
-.016
(.025)
-.019
(.025)
-.158***
(.036)
Log time since
change
-.002
(.011)
-.003
(.009)
-.004
(.009)
-.004
(.009)
-.025**
(.013)
Accountability * time -.002
(.003)
-.002
(.003)
-.001
(.003)
-.001
(.003)
.012***
(.004)
Corruption * time .014
(.011)
.014
(.009)
.015*
(.009)
.016*
(.009)
.014
(.013)
Observations 4952 4952 4952 4952 4952
Countries 142 142 142 142 142
Within R squared .937 .945 .945 .945 .894
F statistic 947.82 1098.77 1099.31 1088.26 537.52
Effect after five years
Judicial
accountability
-.004
(.005)
-.002
(.004)
-.000
(.004)
.000
(.004)
.008
(.006)
Political corruption .028
(.021)
.002
(.002)
.011
(.018)
.009
(.017)
-.132***
(.025)
Note: *** (**) [*] denote significance at p<.01 (p<.05) [p<.10]. The baseline specification is similar to that used
throughout the paper with the exception that we do not estimate Kuznets Curves. The log GDP and log GDP
squared terms are replaced by the lagged dependence variable (log absolute quintile consumption).
42. 42
Figure 1. A model of the political process and its economic effects
43. 43
Figure 2. Marginal effects of corruption on inequality, bottom quintile of income versus consumption
distribution
Figure 3. Marginal effects of judicial accountability on inequality, top quintile of income versus consumption
distribution
44. 44
Figure A1. Changes in top quintile share versus changes in time since last institutional change
-0.4
-0.3
-0.2
-0.1
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000