Electoral competition, accountability and corruption: Theory and evidence from India
Electoral competition, accountability and corruption: Theory and evidence from India
569/2021 Farzana Afridi, Sourav Bhattacharya, Amrita Dhillon and Eilon Solan
In developing countries with weak enforcement institutions, there is implicitly a large reliance on electoral incentives to reduce corruption. However electoral discipline works well only under some conditions. In this paper we study the effect of electoral competition on corruption when uncertainty in elections is high (or accountability is low), as in many developing countries . Our theory focuses on the case of high uncertainty and shows that in this case there is a U-shaped relationship between electoral competition and corruption. We illustrate the predictions of the model with village level data on audit detected irregularities and electoral competition from India.
Culture and Development