Costa Rica’s Anti-Corruption Trajectory: Strengths and Limitations

29 Pages Posted: 20 Aug 2014

See all articles by Bruce Wilson

Bruce Wilson

University of Central Florida; Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI)

Date Written: August 12, 2014

Abstract

In spite of the economic and social policy successes of Latin America’s longest surviving democracy, corruption has become a major problem shaking Costa Ricans’ confidence in appointed and elected public officials. In response to the apparent rise in corruption since the start of the new millennium, governments have introduced new laws and created new agencies to combat corruption at all levels of society, with an emphasis on combating particularism by elected and appointed public officials. This report evaluates the apparent increase in corruption, the efforts to limit, expose, and prosecute corrupt acts, and the factors that have facilitated the rise in corrupt actions on the part of state officials and private citizens. In short, acts of corruption that may have previously gone unnoticed (at least unproven) are now exposed by a more aggressive media and prosecuted by new and/or stronger state anti-corruption agencies and laws in response to multiple major political corruption scandals of the early 2000s. State prosecutors show no deference in their investigations of corruption and/or illicit enrichment by public officials and private figures, no matter how powerful. The only limitation is the level of resources available to these agencies. The contemporary increase in the scope of corruption is not in the quotidian actions of low-level officials directly affecting the lives of ordinary citizens, but in influence trading and manipulation of formal processes. A separate, more recent and growing corruption problem comes from international drug cartels that have amplified their activities and money laundering in Costa Rica that some fear might outstrip the state’s capacity to keep corruption under control.

Keywords: Costa Rica, corruption, anti-corruption, accountability agencies, media

Suggested Citation

Wilson, Bruce, Costa Rica’s Anti-Corruption Trajectory: Strengths and Limitations (August 12, 2014). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2479419 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2479419

Bruce Wilson (Contact Author)

University of Central Florida ( email )

4000 Central Florida Blvd
Orlando, FL 32816-1400
United States

Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI) ( email )

P.O.Box 6033 Bedriftssenteret
N-5892 Bergen, 5006
Norway

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
228
Abstract Views
2,063
Rank
266,397
PlumX Metrics