Transparency and Corruption: The Conditional Significance of a Free Press
Abstract
Is making political institutions more transparent an effective method for combating corruption?
Common wisdom in the debate and research on the causes of corruption answers strongly in
the affirmative. We argue that this optimistic view is both right and wrong. Transparency may
be an important medicine against corruption, but only under certain conditions.
In order to capture this conditionality the concept of transparency must be distinguished from
the interrelated but qualitatively different concepts of publicity and accountability. Facing
increased risks of having information about ones bad behaviour made publicly available
(transparency) is not enough to affect elite actors’ behaviour, if the information is not likely to
be broadly spread, processed and utilised as a ground for putting sanctions on these actors.
The theoretical argument is tested in the paper by analyzing the interaction effects between the
degree of freedom of the press (as indicia of transparency), free and fair elections (indicating
the presence of an accountability mechanism) and the level of education (a condition for
publicity) in a cross-country study of 107 countries. The results demonstrate that the failure of
previous research to analyze interaction effects have led scholars to draw inadequate and
misleading conclusions about the link between transparency, democracy and corruption.
Furthermore, it is argued, these findings will help to solve a puzzle in the previous research on
democracy and corruption. Taken one at a time transparency and free and fair elections will not
help much to reduce corruption. Taken together, on the other hand, they can be a powerful
team.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350633_2005_5-lindstedt_naurin.pdf
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Date
2005Author
Lindstedt, Catharina
Naurin, Daniel
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2005:05
Language
eng