A ban on gifts in public offices partially deters bribery but may induce undeterred bribers to switch from gifts to money. The rise in the use of a more liquid instrument (money) increases the bribe acceptance rate and, possibly, the measure of unqualified applications approved by the office. A gift ban may thus amplify the social costs of corruption by allocating public resources to the wrong people. It is shown that the optimal limited gift ban with a value cap binding on “expensive” gifts dominates the free gifts policy. The limited ban has weaker deterrence than the complete ban but it may reduce the social costs of corruption by minimizing the switch from gifts to money
This paper applies a utilitarian analysis to corporate political donations. Unlike the more common r...
This article analyzes the effect of corruption on the use of nonmonetary sanctions such as imprisonm...
It has been observed that Firms Influence Government Authorities by paying Bribe to them. This paper...
A ban on gifts in public offices partially deters bribery but may induce undeterred bribers to switc...
We study the relative effectiveness of extrinsic monetary disincentives and intrinsic non-monetary d...
This paper closely examines the concept of bribery in dealings between business managers and public ...
A recent paper, Basu argues that for a class of bribes, called harassment bribes, legalization of br...
The literature on corruption tends to focus on grand corruption for contracts and licenses worth lar...
Federal and state law prohibit government officials from accepting gifts or “emoluments” from outsid...
This paper investigates how the availability of alternative forms of bribe payments, on top of money...
We study experimentally whether anti-corruption policies with a focus on bribery might be insufficie...
“This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal...
Legislators in modern democracies (a) accept bribes that are small compared to value of the statutes...
A model of harassment bribes, paid for services one is entitled to, is developed to analyze the prop...
Gifts have been given and received in all eras and societies; gifts are part of a universal human ex...
This paper applies a utilitarian analysis to corporate political donations. Unlike the more common r...
This article analyzes the effect of corruption on the use of nonmonetary sanctions such as imprisonm...
It has been observed that Firms Influence Government Authorities by paying Bribe to them. This paper...
A ban on gifts in public offices partially deters bribery but may induce undeterred bribers to switc...
We study the relative effectiveness of extrinsic monetary disincentives and intrinsic non-monetary d...
This paper closely examines the concept of bribery in dealings between business managers and public ...
A recent paper, Basu argues that for a class of bribes, called harassment bribes, legalization of br...
The literature on corruption tends to focus on grand corruption for contracts and licenses worth lar...
Federal and state law prohibit government officials from accepting gifts or “emoluments” from outsid...
This paper investigates how the availability of alternative forms of bribe payments, on top of money...
We study experimentally whether anti-corruption policies with a focus on bribery might be insufficie...
“This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal...
Legislators in modern democracies (a) accept bribes that are small compared to value of the statutes...
A model of harassment bribes, paid for services one is entitled to, is developed to analyze the prop...
Gifts have been given and received in all eras and societies; gifts are part of a universal human ex...
This paper applies a utilitarian analysis to corporate political donations. Unlike the more common r...
This article analyzes the effect of corruption on the use of nonmonetary sanctions such as imprisonm...
It has been observed that Firms Influence Government Authorities by paying Bribe to them. This paper...