Because government intervention transfers resources from one party to another, it creates room for corruption. As corruption often undermines the purpose of the intervention, governments will try to prevent it. They may create rents for bureaucrats, induce a misallocation of resources, and increase the size of the bureaucracy. Since preventing all corruption is excessively costly, second-best intervention may involve a certain fraction of bureaucrats accepting bribes. When corruption is harder to prevent, there may be both more bureaucrats and higher public-sector wages. Also, the optimal degree of government intervention may be nonmonotonic in the level of incom
We investigate the relationship between corruption and political stability, under-stood as the likel...
Corruption has been part of social interaction since the beginning of humanity. People have always w...
Corruption is thought to prevent poor countries from catching-up. We analyze one channel through whi...
Because government intervention transfers resources from one party to another, it creates room for c...
Market reforms in developing and transition economies have sometimes failed to deliver the desired w...
Empirical evidence shows that not all countries with high levels of corruption have suffered poor gr...
Some of the literature on corruption has stressed the negative consequences of high levels of govern...
This paper presents a dynamic general equilibrium analysis of public sector corruption and economic ...
Among the factors that give rise to corruption, it is suggested that three groups be distinguished: ...
I propose a bribery model that examines decentralized bureaucratic decision-making. There are multip...
Past theoretical research has explored whether bribes paid by firms to government officials are grea...
© 2003 SAGE PublicationsHow does the presence of corruption affect the optimal mix between consumpti...
We construct a model where bureaucrats are corruptible, in the sense that they may accept bribes in ...
Evidence on the relationship between government size and corruption is mixed, and might be misleadin...
The critiques surrounding corruption is often brimming with copious disagreements. Central to the s...
We investigate the relationship between corruption and political stability, under-stood as the likel...
Corruption has been part of social interaction since the beginning of humanity. People have always w...
Corruption is thought to prevent poor countries from catching-up. We analyze one channel through whi...
Because government intervention transfers resources from one party to another, it creates room for c...
Market reforms in developing and transition economies have sometimes failed to deliver the desired w...
Empirical evidence shows that not all countries with high levels of corruption have suffered poor gr...
Some of the literature on corruption has stressed the negative consequences of high levels of govern...
This paper presents a dynamic general equilibrium analysis of public sector corruption and economic ...
Among the factors that give rise to corruption, it is suggested that three groups be distinguished: ...
I propose a bribery model that examines decentralized bureaucratic decision-making. There are multip...
Past theoretical research has explored whether bribes paid by firms to government officials are grea...
© 2003 SAGE PublicationsHow does the presence of corruption affect the optimal mix between consumpti...
We construct a model where bureaucrats are corruptible, in the sense that they may accept bribes in ...
Evidence on the relationship between government size and corruption is mixed, and might be misleadin...
The critiques surrounding corruption is often brimming with copious disagreements. Central to the s...
We investigate the relationship between corruption and political stability, under-stood as the likel...
Corruption has been part of social interaction since the beginning of humanity. People have always w...
Corruption is thought to prevent poor countries from catching-up. We analyze one channel through whi...