Corruption, institutions, and economic development
Tokushima University · University of Cambridge
Abstract
Many scholarly articles on corruption give the impression that the world is populated by two types of people: the ‘sanders’ and the ‘greasers’. The ‘sanders’ believe that corruption is an obstacle to development, while the ‘greasers’ believe that corruption can (in some cases) foster development. This paper takes a critical look at these positions. It concludes that the evidence supporting the ‘greasing the wheels hypothesis’ is very weak and shows that there is no correlation between a new measure of managers’ actual experience with corruption and GDP growth. Instead, the paper uncovers a strong negative correlation between growth in genuine wealth per capita—a direct measure of sustainable development—and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 44.45
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 77
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Language change
- Per capita
- Economics
- Obstacle
- Sustainable development
- Measure (data warehouse)
- Development economics
- Macroeconomics
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions