Corrupt Bureaucrats: The Response of Non-Elected Officials to Electoral Accountability
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Date
2016-12
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Abstract
Modern state bureaucracies are designed to be insulated from political interference. Successful insulation implies that politicians' electoral incentives do not affect bureaucrats' corruption. I test this prediction by assembling a unique dataset on corruption, promotions and demotions for more than 4 million Indonesian local civil servants. To identify the effect of reelection incentives, I exploit the existence of term limits and a difference-indifference strategy. I find that reelection incentives decrease the corruption behaviour of both top and administrative bureaucrats, which constitutes new evidence of the deep, farreaching effects of politicians' accountability on local civil servants. I explore a mechanism
where bureaucrats have career concerns and politicians facing reelection manipulate such concerns by increasing the turnover of top bureaucrats. Consistent with this mechanism,
I find that reelection incentives increase demotions of top bureaucrats and promotions of
administrative bureaucrats.
Description
JEL: D72, D73, H83, K40, O17
Keywords
Corruption, Elections, Bureaucracy