Corruption in developing states reduces the effectiveness of foreign aid that is allo-cated to them, because government officials in corrupt countries use this money for private rather than public purposes. Despite this, existing studies do not find different aid policies from donor governments toward corrupt and less corrupt recipients. How-ever, most of these studies have not taken account of variation among donor states. This is an important omission, because donor states behave differently. This article argues that the responsiveness of donor states to corruption in recipient states depends on their own level of corruption: less corrupt donor states allocate more aid to less corrupt recipient states than to corrupt recipients, whereas c...
Abstract: Foreign aid and corruption have received a lot of scholarly attention in the recent decade...
In response to corruption and inefficient state institutions in recipient countries, some foreign ai...
In this paper we argue that if the cross-country heterogeneity in productivity is more important tha...
Corruption in developing states reduces the effectiveness of foreign aid that is allo-cated to them,...
Despite official discourses of donors, the most corrupt countries receive the highest amounts of for...
Despite official discourses of donors, the most corrupt countries receive the highest amounts of for...
Despite official discourses of donors, the most corrupt countries receive the highest amounts of for...
In this paper, we focus on the determinants of the relationship between aid and corruption. We propo...
Abstract of associated article: A core result of the aid allocation literature is that the quality o...
In this paper we argue that if the cross-country heterogeneity in productivity is more important tha...
In response to corruption and inefficient state institutions in recipient countries, some foreign ai...
We investigate whether more corrupt governments receive less aid. We develop a theoretical framework...
Abstract The existing research on foreign aid offers inconclusive evidence on the factors that make ...
Does corruption reduce support for foreign aid? General explanations for aid fatigue, such as meagre...
Foreign aid is more likely to be effective in countries with quality institutions and low levels of ...
Abstract: Foreign aid and corruption have received a lot of scholarly attention in the recent decade...
In response to corruption and inefficient state institutions in recipient countries, some foreign ai...
In this paper we argue that if the cross-country heterogeneity in productivity is more important tha...
Corruption in developing states reduces the effectiveness of foreign aid that is allo-cated to them,...
Despite official discourses of donors, the most corrupt countries receive the highest amounts of for...
Despite official discourses of donors, the most corrupt countries receive the highest amounts of for...
Despite official discourses of donors, the most corrupt countries receive the highest amounts of for...
In this paper, we focus on the determinants of the relationship between aid and corruption. We propo...
Abstract of associated article: A core result of the aid allocation literature is that the quality o...
In this paper we argue that if the cross-country heterogeneity in productivity is more important tha...
In response to corruption and inefficient state institutions in recipient countries, some foreign ai...
We investigate whether more corrupt governments receive less aid. We develop a theoretical framework...
Abstract The existing research on foreign aid offers inconclusive evidence on the factors that make ...
Does corruption reduce support for foreign aid? General explanations for aid fatigue, such as meagre...
Foreign aid is more likely to be effective in countries with quality institutions and low levels of ...
Abstract: Foreign aid and corruption have received a lot of scholarly attention in the recent decade...
In response to corruption and inefficient state institutions in recipient countries, some foreign ai...
In this paper we argue that if the cross-country heterogeneity in productivity is more important tha...