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Accountability and corruption

February 19, 2013 por Francisco Mejía Leave a Comment


Accountability and corruption

For a while I have been meaning to write a post on the impact of political institutions on corruption based on an interesting paper on municipal elections in Brazil. The paper shows that the reelection specter helps in disciplining corrupt politicians

Mayors with reelection incentives misappropriate 27 percent fewer resources than mayors without reelection incentives. These effects are more pronounced among municipalities with less access to information and where the likelihood of judicial punishment is lower.

Overall our findings suggest that electoral rules that enhance political accountability play a crucial role in constraining politician’s corrupt behavior.

But…

A recent paper shows that in Spain voters might ignore or even reward corrupt practices when the corrupt politician shares in the rents that the illegal action generates:

 […] we find that corrupt mayors lost an average of 2% vote share relative to honest mayors. However, this value hides a relevant heterogeneity: whereas mayors involved in welfare-decreasing corrupt practices suffered an electoral penalty of about 4%, those that engaged in actions that provided citizens with rents survived the verdict of elections completely unharmed. Voters, in sum, turned a blind eye to corruption if they obtained side benefits from it.

In Brazil, majors are elected by direct vote and restricted to one successive reelection. In Spain majors are not directly elected but chosen instead by elected municipal council members and majors can be reelected indefinitely.

One degree of extra separation?


Filed Under: What does and doesn't work in development Tagged With: Brazil, corruption, election, Spain

Francisco Mejía

Francisco Mejía is a Consultant at the Office of Strategic Planning and Development Effectiveness at the Inter-American Development Bank.

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