Corruption as a Self-Reinforcing “Trap”: Implications for Reform Strategy
Abstract
Corruption is widely believed to be a self-reinforcing phenomenon, in the sense that the incentive to engage in corrupt acts increases as corruption becomes more widespread in the relevant community. Leading scholars have argued that corruption’s self-reinforcing property implies that incremental anticorruption reforms cannot be effective, and that the only way to escape a high-corruption equilibrium “trap” is through a so-called “big bang” or “big push.” This widespread view is mistaken. After surveying the reasons corruption might be self-reinforcing (or in some cases self-limiting), this paper demonstrates that corruption’s self-reinforcing property does not imply the necessity of a “big bang” approach to reform, and indeed may strengthen the case for pursuing sustained, cumulative incremental anticorruption reforms.
Link to web site
https://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1737/1737653_2019_10_stephenson.pdf
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Date
2019-06Author
Stephenson, Matthew C.
Publication type
article, other scientific
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2019:10
Language
eng