Corruption and the Costs of Redistribution: Micro
Evidence from Indonesia
Olken Benjamin A. , 2005, National Bureau of
Economic Research:
http://economics.mit.edu/files/2914
This paper examines the degree to which corruption in
developing countries may impair the ability of
governments to redistribute wealth among their citizens.
Specifically, it examines a large anti-poverty program in
Indonesia that distributed subsidised rice to poor
households, estimating the extent of corruption in the
program by comparing administrative data on the
amount of rice distributed with survey data on the
amount actually received by households. The central
estimates suggest that, on average, at least 18 % of the
rice appears to have disappeared. Using conservative
assumptions for the marginal cost of public funds, the
paper estimates that the welfare losses from this
corruption may have been large enough to offset the
potential welfare gains from the redistributive intent of
the program. These findings suggest that corruption
may impose substantial limitations on developing
countries’ redistributive efforts, and may help explain
the low level of transfer programs in developing
countries.
Does corruption affect income inequality and
poverty? Economics of governance:
Gupta Sanjeev, Davoodi Hamid, and Alonso-Terme
Rosa, 2002
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=882360
This paper provides evidence that high and rising
corruption increases income inequality and poverty. A
worsening in the corruption index of a country by one
standard deviation is associated with the same increase
in the Gini coefficient of income inequality
2
as a
reduction in average secondary schooling of 2.3 years.
A one-standard-deviation increase in the growth rate of
corruption reduces income growth of the poor by 7.8
%age points a year. The paper discusses several
channels through which corruption may affect income
inequality and poverty, for instance by negatively
affecting economic growth, progressivity of the tax
system, level and effectiveness of social spending, and
formation of human capital. An important implication of
these findings is that policies that reduce corruption will
most likely reduce income inequality and poverty as
well.
4. Impact of corruption on
development outcomes and
basic services
Several reports provide evidence of the negative
consequences of corruption on quality of government,
investments, and on the quantity and quality of basic
services, which disproportionately affects the poorest,
who heavily depend on them.
Therefore by affecting development outcomes,
corruption is also likely to affect the ability of developing
countries to reach the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs). For example, as the OECD 2013 report listed
above mentions, “child mortality rates in countries with
high levels of corruption are about one third higher than
in countries with low corruption, and infant mortality
rates are almost twice as high and student dropout
rates are five times as high.”
This section provides an overview of the correlation
between corruption and human development, as well as
a list of studies observing the impact and costs of
corruption with regards to human development and the
provision of basic services.
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