Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Corruption
- Causes
Anmerkungen:
- Based on the Fraud Triangle
- Opportunity
- Control over state
apparatus
- Authoritarian
states
- But authoritarian ruler can also
control corruption
- Regulatory capture
by powerful interest
groups
- Example: Drug
syndicates in
Hong Kong
- Weak or uncertain
political institutions
- Rapid political and economic
liberalization process
- Unclear or frequently changing laws
- Weak/ corrupt law enforcement
agencies
- Inadequate police force
- Poor investigative abilities
- Weak political will
- Little resources
dedicated to fight corruption
- Little/ poor
anti-corruption legislation
- Complex and complicated
regulations or legal processes
- Unclear delination of
responsibility or accountability
- Corrupt/ complicit judiciary
- Poor supervisory oversight
- Lack of checks
- Government monopoly
over certain legal or
political processes or
outcomes
- Ability to
extract
Economic
Rent
Anmerkungen:
- Myint, Asia-Pacific Development Journal Vol 7. No. 2 (UNESCAP, 2000), Page 36
- Discretionary powers
Anmerkungen:
- Myint, Asia-Pacific Development Journal Vol 7. No. 2 (UNESCAP, 2000), Page 38
- Judgment required in
deciding
- WHO rules apply to
- HOW rules are applied
- WHEN rules can be changed
- Ease of hiding tracks
- Technology
- International
financial markets
- Money laundering
- Ill gotten gains
hidden offshore
- Rationalization
- Payment deserved for services provided
- Everyone else is doing it
(Systemic Corruption)
- "Why should I not benefit too?"
- "I will lose out if I don't do it"
- Low probability of being caught
- Personal consequences of
getting caught are not serious
- No one is directly harmed
- Part of culture
- Motivation
- For government
official (demand-side)
- Endangerment of personal
and family safety
- High level corruption
Anmerkungen:
- Myint, Asia-Pacific Development Journal Vol 7. No. 2 (UNESCAP, 2000), Page 40
- Greed
- Stay in office
- Low level corruption
Anmerkungen:
- Myint, Asia-Pacific Development Journal Vol 7. No. 2 (UNESCAP, 2000), Page 40
- Promotion depends on complicity
- Peer pressure/ brotherhood
- Supplement income for living expenses
- For private party (supply-side)
- Influence outcomes of a decision
- Approval status of a business transaction
- Judgment of a court case
- Get ahead of business competition
- Regulatory avoidance
- Save transaction time and costs
- Illegal activities
- Consequences
- Economic
- Political
- Lose legitimacy
- Counterproductive towards other policies (E.g. poverty alleviation)
- Reduce transparency in
policymaking
- Reduce political competition
- Political instability
- Reduced interest in political participation
- Increase income inequality and reduce social mobility