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The Economics of Corruption and Bureaucratic Inefficiency in Weak States : Theory and Evidence

Part of the Kollektive Entscheidungen, Wirtschaftspolitik und Offentliche Finanzen series
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This monograph surveys recent developments in the political economy literature addressing the incentive problems of political decision making, and helps to understand the causes of corruption and bureaucratic inefficiency in countries that lack a constitutional order.

Using a principal-agent theoretical framework, the author shows how corruption and patronage may reduce political instability, thus enabling governments in weak states to provide public goods which would otherwise be missing, even though such an institutional arrangement is usually self-defeating in the long run.

The theoretical results are used to offer a stylized interpretation of the political history of the Mexican state.

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RRP £32.50
Product Details
Peter Lang AG
3631511361 / 9783631511367
Paperback / softback
06/05/2003
Switzerland
134 pages, 5 fig., 4 tables
190 grams