Does Corruption Cause Aid Fatigue?
Sammanfattning
Does corruption reduce support for foreign aid? General explanations for aid fatigue, such as meagre
development results and the perception that taxpayers’ money is being wasted fail to solve what
we call the aid-corruption paradox, namely that the need for foreign aid is often the greatest in corrupt
environments. Corruption can be seen as an external impediment on the effectiveness of aid, but
also as an internal and important target of aid-driven efforts to improve governments. This paper
explores the influence of corruption on support for foreign aid and conditions under which corruption
causes aid fatigue. Building on studies of the motives for foreign aid and the social acceptability
of corruption, we suggest that the relationship between corruption and aid fatigue substantially
depends on fundamental beliefs about the role of foreign aid. The analysis builds on data from the
2009 Eurobarometer survey. Our findings have implications for understanding the consequences of
the remarkable increase in exposure of corruption in recent years, efforts to tackle global environmental
challenges, and fundamental relationships between corruption and aid legitimacy.
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http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1357/1357855_2011_17_bauhr_nasiritousi.pdf
Fil(er)
Datum
2011-12Författare
Bauhr, Monika
Nasiritousi, Naghmeh
ISSN
1653-8919
Serie/rapportnr.
Working Papers
2011:17
Språk
eng