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Partners in crime : collusive corruption and search

journal contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by Munirul NabinMunirul Nabin, G Bose
This paper analyzes corruption as a collusive act which requires the participation of two willing partners. An agent intending to engage in a corrupt act must search for a like-minded partner. When many people in the economy are corrupt, such a search is more likely to be fruitful. Thus when an agent engages in a search, he raises the net benefit of searching for other similar agents in the economy, creating an externality. This introduces a non-convexity in the model, which consequently has multiple equilibria. The economy can be in stable equilibrium with a high or low level of corruption.

Starting from the high-corruption equilibrium, a sufficient increase in vigilance triggers a negative cascade, leading the economy to a new equilibrium in which no agent finds it profitable to search for corrupt partners. The no-corruption equilibrium continues to be stable if vigilance is then relaxed. This suggests that the correct way to deal with corruption is to launch a ``big push'' with large amounts of resources. Once the level of corruption declines, these resources can be withdrawn.

History

Journal

B.E. journal of economic analysis and policy

Volume

8

Issue

1

Season

Article 9

Pagination

1 - 21

Publisher

Berkeley Electronic

Location

Berkeley, Calif.

ISSN

1935-1682

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG

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