journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-01, 08:43 authored by Neil Campbell, Shrabani SahaShrabani Saha<p>This paper argues that the relationship between democracy and corruption is non-monotonic. When a country shifts from autocratic rule to highly imperfect democracy (an 'electoral democracy') it is frequently perceived that the level of corruption increases. Conversely, when the democracy level is already relatively high (approaching 'mature democracy') an increase in the level of democracy is typically expected to decrease the level of corruption. To assist with our discussion of these issues, before going on to the empirical part of the paper, we look specifically at the case of South Korea to illustrate how corruption responded to an increasing level of democracy. Using panel data, we find strong empirical support for the non-monotonic relationship. For Asia-Pacific countries, we find that the democracy-corruption relationship becomes negative, at a surprisingly high level of democracy. Moreover we also find that the South Asian region is the most corrupt. © 2013 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- Lincoln Business School (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Journal of the Asia Pacific EconomyVolume
18Issue
2Pages/Article Number
290-303Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)External DOI
ISSN
1354-7860eISSN
1469-9648Date Submitted
2014-02-13Date Accepted
2013-05-01Date of First Publication
2013-05-01Date of Final Publication
2013-05-01Date Document First Uploaded
2014-04-03ePrints ID
13343Usage metrics
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