First draft. Comments welcome Abstract: We model the two way interaction between education, corruption and the level of output. Corruption reduces income levels and hence educational attainment. Education in turn affects the incentives for corruption: more education increases output and thus the rents from corruption, but it also increases the probability that the electorate identifies corrupt behavior and ousts the incumbent politician. In this context, we identify the conditions under which an opportunist politician has the incentives to take actions that will allow the economy to escape from a poverty trap. Our analysis shows that the relationship between education, output levels and the level of corruption is non-monotonic, and that bot...
A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Economics...
Over the last 30 years, countries with more unequal income distributions tended to spend more on ter...
In the standard model of corruption, the rich are more likely to pay bribes for their children’s edu...
Abstract: We model the two way interaction between education, corruption and the level of output. Co...
Abstract: We model the two way interaction between education, corruption and the level of output. Co...
Abstract: We examine how the interaction between education and corruption affects institutional refo...
This paper presents a dynamic general equilibrium analysis of education, public sector corruption an...
Educational corruption is a worldwide phenomenon yet its impact on economic growth is unclear. In th...
A large number of studies have emerged on the economics of corruption since the seminal work of Leff...
Abstract. This paper uses an encompassing framework developed by Murphy et al. (1991, 1993) to study...
Corruption is a problem that continues to plague developed and developing countries worldwide. Previ...
Human capital development, through education and skill development, is instrumental for economic gro...
The roots of corruption are highly contested. We argue that there is a path dependence across almost...
URL des Cahiers :http://mse.univ-paris1.fr/MSEFramCahier2006.htmCahiers de la Maison des Sciences Ec...
In many models of corruption where enforcement is unbiased and the official maximizes her income, th...
A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Economics...
Over the last 30 years, countries with more unequal income distributions tended to spend more on ter...
In the standard model of corruption, the rich are more likely to pay bribes for their children’s edu...
Abstract: We model the two way interaction between education, corruption and the level of output. Co...
Abstract: We model the two way interaction between education, corruption and the level of output. Co...
Abstract: We examine how the interaction between education and corruption affects institutional refo...
This paper presents a dynamic general equilibrium analysis of education, public sector corruption an...
Educational corruption is a worldwide phenomenon yet its impact on economic growth is unclear. In th...
A large number of studies have emerged on the economics of corruption since the seminal work of Leff...
Abstract. This paper uses an encompassing framework developed by Murphy et al. (1991, 1993) to study...
Corruption is a problem that continues to plague developed and developing countries worldwide. Previ...
Human capital development, through education and skill development, is instrumental for economic gro...
The roots of corruption are highly contested. We argue that there is a path dependence across almost...
URL des Cahiers :http://mse.univ-paris1.fr/MSEFramCahier2006.htmCahiers de la Maison des Sciences Ec...
In many models of corruption where enforcement is unbiased and the official maximizes her income, th...
A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Economics...
Over the last 30 years, countries with more unequal income distributions tended to spend more on ter...
In the standard model of corruption, the rich are more likely to pay bribes for their children’s edu...