Why Pay Bribes? Collective Action and Anticorruption Efforts
Abstract
This paper suggests that the effectiveness of current anticorruption policy suffers from a focus on
the scale of the corruption problem instead of type of corruption that is to be fought. I make a
distinction between need and greed corruption. Contrary to the most commonly used distinctions
this distinction focuses on the basic motivation for paying a bribe, and whether the bribe is used to
gain services that citizens are legally entitled to or not. Greed corruption is used to gain advantages
that citizens are not legally entitled to, build on collusion rather than extortion and can thereby
remain invisible and unobtrusive. In greed corruption societies the costs of corruption are divided
between a large number of actors and the negative effects of corruption on economic and democratic
performance are delayed and diffuse. I subsequently use this distinction to develop three
propositions about the relationship between corruption and institutional trust, and the effects of
anticorruption policy. Using both cross country data and a case study of a low corruption context, I
suggests a) That greed corruption can coexist with high institutional trust, and that it thereby may
not follow the expected, and often confirmed, negative relationship between corruption and institutional trust b) That greed corruption may not produce civic engagement against corruption and c)
That increased transparency may not produce the expected benefits in low need corruption contexts,
since it can disproportionally alter expectations about the entrenchment of corruption in a
society. In other words, the paper suggest that the balance between need and greed corruption in a
society determines the effectiveness of traditional policy measures derived from the logic of principal
agent theory, such as societal accountability and transparency, and that the relevance of collective
action theory to understand the effects of anticorruption efforts can be extended to contexts
where the overall level of corruption is low.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1357/1357856_2011_18_bauhr_nasiritousi.pdf
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Date
2011-12Author
Bauhr, Monika
Nasiritousi, Naghmeh
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2011:18
Language
eng