Corruption and Environmental Policy: An Alternative Perspective

36 Pages Posted: 19 Mar 2011

See all articles by Thanassis Lapatinas

Thanassis Lapatinas

Athens University of Economics and Business - Department of Economics; University of Ioannina - Department of Economics

Anastasia Litina

University of Ioannina

Eftichios S. Sartzetakis

University of Macedonia - Accounting and Finance

Date Written: March 15, 2011

Abstract

We construct an overlapping generations model in which agents live through two periods; childhood and adulthood. Each agent makes choices only as an adult, based on her utility that depends on her own consumption and the human capital and environmental quality endowed to her offspring. Entering adulthood, agents choose randomly between two occupations: citizens and politicians. Citizens are the only producers of a single good and choose the proportion of their income to declare to the tax authorities. Politicians decide upon the allocation of the tax revenue between environmental protection and education activities, taking as given the rates of peculation in each activity. In this context, two self-fulfilling stable equilibria can emerge, one associated with high and another with low corruption. Corrupted politicians induce high levels of tax evasion, reducing total public funds and thus environmental protection activities. This result is in accordance with existing empirical evidence and implies that environmental policies may fail in corrupt countries where they are used as means of supporting rent seeking activities instead of protecting the environment. A higher level political authority could intervene and force the low corruption equilibrium by choosing the appropriate tax rate and, through institutional changes, the rates of peculation.

Keywords: Corruption, Environmental Policy

JEL Classification: H2, H26, H3, Q56, Q58

Suggested Citation

Lapatinas, Athanasios and Lapatinas, Athanasios and Litina, Anastasia and Sartzetakis, Eftichios S., Corruption and Environmental Policy: An Alternative Perspective (March 15, 2011). FEEM Working Paper No. 23.2011, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1786757 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1786757

Athanasios Lapatinas

Athens University of Economics and Business - Department of Economics ( email )

76 Patission Street
GR-10434 Athens
Greece

University of Ioannina - Department of Economics ( email )

45110 Ioannina
Greece

Anastasia Litina

University of Ioannina ( email )

45110 Ioannina
Greece

Eftichios S. Sartzetakis (Contact Author)

University of Macedonia - Accounting and Finance ( email )

156 Egnatia Str.
Thessaloniki, 54006
Greece

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