Why Anticorruption Reforms Fail—Systemic Corruption as a Collective Action Problem 论文

2012Governance引用 846
Corruption and Economic DevelopmentCrime, Illicit Activities, and GovernanceEconomic Growth and Development

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Governance
发表日期
2012-09-07
发表年份
2012

关键词

Corruption and Economic DevelopmentCrime, Illicit Activities, and GovernanceEconomic Growth and Development

摘要

With an increased awareness of the detrimental effects of corruption on development, strategies to fight it are now a top priority in policy circles. Yet, in countries ridden with systemic corruption, few successes have resulted from the investment. On the basis of an interview study conducted in Kenya and Uganda—two arguably typically thoroughly corrupt countries—we argue that part of an explanation to why anticorruption reforms in countries plagued by widespread corruption fail is that they are based on a theoretical mischaracterization of the problem of systemic corruption. More specifically, the analysis reveals that while contemporary anticorruption reforms are based on a conceptualization of corruption as a principal–agent problem, in thoroughly corrupt settings, corruption rather resembles a collective action problem. This, in turn, leads to a breakdown of any anticorruption reform that builds on the principal–agent framework, taking the existence of noncorruptible so‐called principals for granted.

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