CORRUPTION
CORRUPTION
CORRUPTION
This paper presents two propositions about corruption. First, the structure of
government institutions and of the political process are very important determi-
nants of the level of corruption. In particular, weak governments that do not control
their agencies experience very high corruption levels. Second, the illegality of
corruption and the need for secrecy make it much more distortionary and costly
than its sister activity, taxation. These results may explain why, in some less
developed countries, corruption is so high and so costly to development.
*We are grateful to Lawrence Katz and two anonymous referees for comments,
and to the Bradley Foundation for financial support.
© 1993 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.
The Quarterly Journal of Economics, August 1993
600 QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
less than the official duty, but then give nothing at all to the
government. In this case, the marginal cost to the official is zero.
While conceptually the two cases are similar—they differ only in
the level of the marginal cost to the official—in the first case
corruption always raises the total price of the good, whereas in the
second case it might reduce it. Corruption with theft is obviously
more attractive to the buyers.
If the official cannot price discriminate between buyers, then
as a monopolist, he will simply set the marginal revenue equal to
P+ Bribe
MR
FIGURE Ia
Corruption without Theft
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distinction between taxes and bribes is blurred by the fact that the
treasury is indistinguishable from the sovereign's pocket. Yet for
most governments, the distinction is material and shows how
corruption substitutes for taxation.
Penalizing the official for corruption changes the level of the
bribe he demands, but does not change the essence of the problem.
If the probability of detection and the penalty are independent of
the bribe and of the number of people who pay it, the official will
charge the same bribe provided that the penalties are not so high
that corruption is no longer profitable. If the expected penalty
increases with the level of the bribe, he might reduce the bribe and
raise output. On the other hand, if the expected penalty rises in the
number of people he charges a bribe (for example, because of the
higher probability of a complaint), then he will reduce the supply
and raise the bribe. The official trades off the benefits given in
Figures Ia and Ib against the expected penalties. For our purposes,
we do not need to focus on this aspect of the problem (see Becker
and Stigler [1974], Rose-Ackerman [1978], and Klitgaard [1988]).
This simple analysis suggests that corruption spreads because
of competition both between the officials and between the consum-
ers. If jobs are distributed among officials through an auction
mechanism, whereby those who pay the most for a job get it, then
the prospective officials who do not collect bribes simply cannot
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the demand for the product of the other. As a result, each would
charge a higher price than a joint monopolist would, and both the
quantity of steel and glass sold, and the combined profits from
these sales would be lower. In the last scenario, if each of these
independent monopolists can sell both steel and glass, and they
compete on price, they will drive the price of both steel and glass
down to the marginal cost. The profits will be the lowest, and
output the highest, of the three cases. Competition is the best; joint
1. Importantly, if corruption with theft replaces taxes, then the corrupt state
might have to replace the lost revenue through very distortionary taxation.
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could tax car imports, it would charge an import duty of 10 per car,
which would result in the importation of ten red cars, no consumer
surplus, and the government revenue of 100. In this case, taxes
lead to no efficiency losses but a redistribution from consumers to
the government. Suppose alternatively that the trade ministry
bureaucrats want to raise revenue through bribes rather than
taxes. However, they cannot undetectably collect bribes at the
border for importing red cars (which are too bright and noticeable),
but can collect bribes for importing green cars. The ministry then
one producer in the world made that machine, and the Mozambi-
quan government applied to the producer's home country for an
aid package to buy it. Since that aid was not immediately forthcom-
ing, the factory kept using the traditional technology.
The demand for equipment much fancier than the factory
appeared to need seems irrational until one realizes that buying a
fancier machine offered the manager (and the ministry officials)
much better opportunities for corruption. If the factory bought a
generic machine, the manager would probably have to use interna-
V. CONCLUSION
This paper has explored two broad reasons why corruption
may be costly to economic development. The first reason is the
weakness of central government, which allows various governmen-
tal agencies and bureaucracies to impose independent bribes on
private agents seeking complementary permits from these agen-
cies. When the entry of these agencies into regulation is free, they
will drive the cumulative bribe burden on private agents to infinity.
A good illustration of this problem is foreign investment in
post-Communist Russia. To invest in a Russian company, a
foreigner must bribe every agency involved in foreign investment,
including the foreign investment office, the relevant industrial
ministry, the finance ministry, the executive branch of the local
government, the legislative branch, the central bank, the state
property bureau, and so on. The obvious result is that foreigners
do not invest in Russia. Such competing bureaucracies, each of
which can stop a project from proceeding, hamper investment and
616 QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
REFERENCES
Banfield, Edward, "Corruption as a Feature of Government Organization," Jour-
nal of Law and Economics, XVIII (1975), 587-605.
Barro, Robert J., "Economic Growth in a Cross Section of Countries," Quarterly
Journal of Economics, CVI (1991), 407-44.
Becker, Gary S., and George J. Stigler, "Law Enforcement, Malfeasance, and the
Compensation of Enforcers," Journal of Legal Studies, III, (1974), 1-19.
Business International Corporation, Introduction to the Country, Assessment Ser-
vice (New York: Business International Corporation, 1984).
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