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The Political Economy of Institutions and Corruption in American States

David Dreyer Lassen
University of Copenhagen - Department of Economics

James E. Alt
Harvard University - Department of Government


November 2002

U of Copenhagen, Economic Policy Research Unit Working Paper No. 02-16

Abstract:     
Theoretically, this paper draws on political agency theory to formulate hypotheses. Empirically, it shows that political institutions have a role in explaining the prevalence of political corruption in American states. In the states, a set of democracies where the rule of law is relatively well established and the confounding effects of differing electoral systems and regimes are absent, institutional variables relating to the openness of the political system inhibit corruption. That is, other things equal, the extent to which aspiring politicians can enter and gain financial backing, and to which voters can focus their votes on policies and thereby hold incumbent politicians accountable for policy outcomes and find substitutes for them if dissatisfied with those outcomes, reduce corruption as a general problem of agency. These institutional effects are estimated in the presence of controls for variables representing other approaches.

Keywords: corruption, institutions

JEL Classifications: D7, H0

Working Paper Series

Date posted: December 12, 2002 ; Last revised: December 12, 2002

Suggested Citation

Lassen, David Dreyer and Alt, James E., The Political Economy of Institutions and Corruption in American States (November 2002). U of Copenhagen, Economic Policy Research Unit Working Paper No. 02-16. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=353880 or doi:10.2139/ssrn.353880


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Contact Information

David Dreyer Lassen (Contact Author)
University of Copenhagen - Department of Economics ( email )
Studiestraede 6
DK 1455 Copenhagen Denmark
+45 3532 4412 (Phone)
+45 3532 4444 (Fax)
James E. Alt
Harvard University - Department of Government ( email )
1737 Cambridge Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States
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