The comparative politics of corruption: accounting for the East Asian paradox in empirical studies of corruption, growth and investment

Autor(es) : Rock, Michael T; Bonnett, Heidi

Editor : 2004

Paginación :

999-1017 p.

Serie : World Development, 32, 6

Notas :

Incl. bibliographical references, stats,

Numerous empirical studies demonstrate that corruption reduces investment and/or slows growth. But how robust are these relationships? In this paper, this question is answered through a series of cross-country regression tests using four different corruption datasets. It finds that corruption slows growth and/or reduces investment in most developing countries, particularly small developing countries, but increases growth in the large East Asian newly industrializing economies. The latter finding provides solid empirical support to a country case literature that explains the East Asian paradox, the combination of high corruption and high growth, in terms of stable and mutually beneficial exchanges of government promotional privileges for bribes and kickbacks.

  • Corrupción, Sobornos, Desarrollo económico y social, Gestión educacional, Gobernabilidad
  • Asia y Pacífico