Monday, November 26, 2012

Anna Persson, Bo Rothstein, Jan Teorell

With an increased awareness of the detrimental effects of corruption on development, strategies to fight it are now a top priority in policy circles around the world. Since Africa is home to most of the thoroughly corrupt countries in the world, it is no coincidence that the African continent has been the major target of this movement. To date, however, few successes have resulted from the investment. In fact, in some countries corruption even seems to have become more entrenched in step with the efforts to curb it. Contemporary anti-corruption reforms in Africa have largely failed because they are based on a mischaracterization of the problem of corruption in contexts with systematic corruption. While contemporary anti-corruption reforms are based on a conceptualization of corruption as a principal-agent problem, in the African context corruption rather seems to resemble a collective action problem, making the short-term costs of fighting corruption outweigh the benefits. Consequently, even if most individuals morally disapprove of corruption and are fully aware of the negative consequences for the society at large, very few actors show a sustained willingness to fight it.

2 comments:

  1. The failure of Anti-Corruption Policies


    A Theoretical Mischaracterization of the Problem

    by Anna Persson, Bo Rothstein and Jan Teorell

    University of Gothenburg

    http://www.sida.se/PageFiles/39460/Failure%20Anti_Corruption%20policy%20(2).pdf

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  2. Why does corruption in Africa prevail despite a large number of efforts to fight it?

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