Government transparency and political clientelism: Evidence from randomized anti-corruption audits in Brazil
Resumo
Political clientelism is considered a fundamental reason why politicians are not accountable and responsive to their constituencies. In this working paper, we study whether transparency initiatives – more specifically, top-down anti-corruption audits – can reduce the incidence of vote-buying and political clientelism in the context of Brazil’s municipal government anti-corruption program. This program selected municipalities at random to audit municipal finances, which allows for causal inference. We combine the audit program data for a sample of municipalities in the country’s Northeast region with a dedicated longitudinal survey we conducted in 2011-2013 of a large representative sample of impoverished rural households. This enables us to estimate short and long-term effects of the government anti corruption audits on subsequent levels of vote-buying and political clientelism.
Assunto
Country / Region
Data
2019-01-31Cite this publication
Belongs to collection
Autor
Bobonis, Gustavo J.Gertler, Paul J.
Gonzalez-Navarro, Marco
Nichter, Simeon
Items Relacionados
Estimating the nature of political corruption: evidence from a policy experiment in Brazil
This paper proposes a test to estimate the nature of political corruption in developing countries: embezzlement by self enriching politicians versus ...
Government performance, taxation and citizen participation: evidence from Brazil
Fiscal contract theories of the state hypothesize that government performance affects tax collection and that institutions that foster representation ...
Political constraints and state capacity: Evidence from a land allocation program in Mexico
In this paper we contribute to the understanding of the politics of state building. We emphasize that incumbent clientelistic parties might have incentives ...