Given both corruption's and bureaucratic inefficiency's importance for development and good governance, understanding their causes is paramount. This paper argues that majority state ownership of most the most important economic sectors of a country results in higher levels of corruption and inefficiency. When political and managerial elites both own and manage the country's most important economic resources, they have greater incentives for corrupt or inefficient behavior. These elites use national resources at their disposal more for short-term personal and political goals than for long-term economic ones. This paper tests this hypothesis on a relatively underused, but often cited, data set from the 1980s. Using a cross-national, regressi...
This paper investigates empirically the effect of corruption on countries' economic efficiency. By u...
The presence of corruption inflicts substantial economic costs on an economy. Corruption is a double...
The present study examines the following claims: (1) nations with more versus less rules nurture gro...
This paper analyzes the spatial distribution of corruption and its primary economic and political de...
On average, higher per capita income comes with lower corruption levels. Yet, countries like Mexico,...
Although corruption poses fundamental challenges to both democratic governance and market economies,...
This paper provides an explanation for the observation that developing countries tend to have a high...
In recent years corruption has come to be considered as a pervasive phenomenon, and a major obstacl...
For at least twenty years, much of the focus of empirical research on corruption has been on its pre...
Some of the literature on corruption has stressed the negative consequences of high levels of govern...
The prediction that economic freedom is beneficial in reducing corruption has not been found to be u...
Using a well-known index of corruption, this paper examines the determinants of corruption for a lar...
The corruption is a complex and generalized phenomenon all over the world, with cultural, social, ps...
Corruption, which is described as the use of public power for individual purposes is a complex conce...
This paper offers a cross-country analysis of street-level corruption. In line with earlier studies ...
This paper investigates empirically the effect of corruption on countries' economic efficiency. By u...
The presence of corruption inflicts substantial economic costs on an economy. Corruption is a double...
The present study examines the following claims: (1) nations with more versus less rules nurture gro...
This paper analyzes the spatial distribution of corruption and its primary economic and political de...
On average, higher per capita income comes with lower corruption levels. Yet, countries like Mexico,...
Although corruption poses fundamental challenges to both democratic governance and market economies,...
This paper provides an explanation for the observation that developing countries tend to have a high...
In recent years corruption has come to be considered as a pervasive phenomenon, and a major obstacl...
For at least twenty years, much of the focus of empirical research on corruption has been on its pre...
Some of the literature on corruption has stressed the negative consequences of high levels of govern...
The prediction that economic freedom is beneficial in reducing corruption has not been found to be u...
Using a well-known index of corruption, this paper examines the determinants of corruption for a lar...
The corruption is a complex and generalized phenomenon all over the world, with cultural, social, ps...
Corruption, which is described as the use of public power for individual purposes is a complex conce...
This paper offers a cross-country analysis of street-level corruption. In line with earlier studies ...
This paper investigates empirically the effect of corruption on countries' economic efficiency. By u...
The presence of corruption inflicts substantial economic costs on an economy. Corruption is a double...
The present study examines the following claims: (1) nations with more versus less rules nurture gro...