The causes of corruption: a cross-national study
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The authors analyzed several indexes of perceived corruption compiled from business risk surveys for the 1980s and 1990s and found that countries with Protestant traditions, histories of British rule, more developed economies, and (probably) higher imports were less corrupt.About:
This article is published in Journal of Public Economics.The article was published on 2000-06-01 and is currently open access. It has received 3592 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Corruption Perceptions Index & Corruption.read more
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The quality of government
TL;DR: The authors investigated empirically the determinants of the quality of governments in a large cross-section of countries and found that countries that are poor, close to the equator, ethnolinguistically heterogeneous, use French or socialist laws, or have high proportions of Catholics or Muslims exhibit inferior government performance.
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Veto Players: How Political Institutions Work
TL;DR: In this paper, Veto players analysis of European Union Institutions is presented, focusing on the role of individual veto players and collective players in the analysis of the institutions of the European Union.
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Politically Connected Firms
TL;DR: In this article, an examination of firms in 47 countries showed a widespread overlap of controlling shareholders and top officers who are connected with national parliaments or governments, particularly in countries with higher levels of corruption, with barriers to foreign investment, and with more transparent systems.
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Politically connected firms
TL;DR: In this article, an examination of firms in 47 countries showed a widespread overlap of controlling shareholders and top officers who are connected with national parliaments or governments, particularly in countries with higher levels of corruption, with barriers to foreign investment, and with more transparent systems.
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Eight Questions about Corruption
TL;DR: The authors discuss eight frequently asked questions about public corruption: What is corruption, which countries are the most corrupt, what are the common characteristics of countries with high corruption, what is the magnitude of corruption, do higher wages for bureaucrats reduce corruption, can competition reduce corruption and why have there been so few successful attempts to fight corruption?
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An international statistical survey of government employment and wages
TL;DR: Schiavo-Campo, de Tommaso, and Mukherjee as discussed by the authors complemented a separate study in this series ("Government Employment and Pay: A Global and Regional Perspective", Policy Research Working Paper 1771, May 1997) by providing the detailed statistical and econometric evidence on which that separate study is based.
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Presidents vs. Parliaments: The Centrality of Political Culture
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An international statistical survey of government employment and wages
TL;DR: The authors complements a separate study in this series ("Government Employment and Pay: A Global and Regional Perspective,"Policy Research Working Paper 1771, May, 1997) by providing the detailed statistical and econometric evidence on which that separate study is based.
Book
Competitive elections in developing countries
TL;DR: The At the Polls series as mentioned in this paper provides both a chronicle of events and a thorough analysis of the election results, including the results of the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
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Political corruption in Europe and Latin America
TL;DR: Little and E.Thomas as mentioned in this paper discuss corruption, politics and society in early modern Italy and discuss the history of corruption in Latin America between Independence and the Depression. But they do not discuss the relationship between corruption and public service fraud.