Corruption and Cash Policy: Evidence from a Natural Experiment
61 Pages Posted: 10 Feb 2023 Last revised: 29 Aug 2023
Date Written: August 23, 2023
Abstract
We study the effects of a 2016 U.S. Supreme Court decision that made it harder for prosecutors to bring corruption cases against public servants. We argue that this exogenous shock to anticorruption enforcement created a “protection racket”: regulated firms located in high-corruption states increased cash reserves in the years after the decision, presumably to make illicit payments to local politicians. These firms experienced negative abnormal returns near the decision, indicating that reduced anti-corruption enforcement decreased firm value . Consistent with the protection hypothesis, regulated firms in high-corruption states became less likely to be penalized by government agencies after the decision.
Keywords: Corruption, Cash Policy, Corporate Governance, Regulation, Federalism
JEL Classification: G32, G38, D73, K23, K42
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