The impact of fiscal policies on corruption: A panel analysis

This article seeks to complement the previous literature and clarify whether fiscal policy plays a role in the level of corruption of a country. The present work investigates whether the increase in fiscal pressure leads to a higher level of corruption and whether the results differ from developed t...

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Main Authors: Monica V. Achim, Sorin N. Borlea, Andrei M. Anghelina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2018-04-01
Series:South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/1970
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spelling doaj-91257a192c9c4be19b002781aae884892020-11-25T01:28:38ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences1015-88122222-34362018-04-01211e1e910.4102/sajems.v21i1.1970637The impact of fiscal policies on corruption: A panel analysisMonica V. Achim0Sorin N. Borlea1Andrei M. Anghelina2Department of Finance, Faculty of Economics and Business Administration, Babes-Bolyai UniversityDepartment of Economics, Faculty of Economics, Informatics and Engineering, Vasile Goldiș Western University of AradDepartment of Economics, Faculty of Economics, Informatics and Engineering, Vasile Goldiș Western University of AradThis article seeks to complement the previous literature and clarify whether fiscal policy plays a role in the level of corruption of a country. The present work investigates whether the increase in fiscal pressure leads to a higher level of corruption and whether the results differ from developed to developing countries. This article examines a large sample consisting of over 185 countries, during the period 2005–2014. The technique employed was short panel data. Five statistical models were used such as the pooled OLS, pooled FGLS, within model, between model and random-effects GLS model. Our main contribution consists in finding differentiated results of the influence of fiscal policy on the level of corruption among developed and developing countries. For developed countries, we found that, with high-quality institutions, low fiscal pressure leads to a lower level of corruption, which is in line with expectations. Conversely, in developing countries, with low-level institutional quality, low fiscal pressure increases corruption, because of low governance efficiency under which people may easily circumvent the law. Our findings suggest that governments and policy-makers need to acknowledge that the anti-corruption fight requires not only the right fiscal policies but also the right way of implementing these policies, recognising the role of quality institutions, which need to prevail in any country.https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/1970corruptionfiscal policycomparativepanel analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Monica V. Achim
Sorin N. Borlea
Andrei M. Anghelina
spellingShingle Monica V. Achim
Sorin N. Borlea
Andrei M. Anghelina
The impact of fiscal policies on corruption: A panel analysis
South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences
corruption
fiscal policy
comparative
panel analysis
author_facet Monica V. Achim
Sorin N. Borlea
Andrei M. Anghelina
author_sort Monica V. Achim
title The impact of fiscal policies on corruption: A panel analysis
title_short The impact of fiscal policies on corruption: A panel analysis
title_full The impact of fiscal policies on corruption: A panel analysis
title_fullStr The impact of fiscal policies on corruption: A panel analysis
title_full_unstemmed The impact of fiscal policies on corruption: A panel analysis
title_sort impact of fiscal policies on corruption: a panel analysis
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences
issn 1015-8812
2222-3436
publishDate 2018-04-01
description This article seeks to complement the previous literature and clarify whether fiscal policy plays a role in the level of corruption of a country. The present work investigates whether the increase in fiscal pressure leads to a higher level of corruption and whether the results differ from developed to developing countries. This article examines a large sample consisting of over 185 countries, during the period 2005–2014. The technique employed was short panel data. Five statistical models were used such as the pooled OLS, pooled FGLS, within model, between model and random-effects GLS model. Our main contribution consists in finding differentiated results of the influence of fiscal policy on the level of corruption among developed and developing countries. For developed countries, we found that, with high-quality institutions, low fiscal pressure leads to a lower level of corruption, which is in line with expectations. Conversely, in developing countries, with low-level institutional quality, low fiscal pressure increases corruption, because of low governance efficiency under which people may easily circumvent the law. Our findings suggest that governments and policy-makers need to acknowledge that the anti-corruption fight requires not only the right fiscal policies but also the right way of implementing these policies, recognising the role of quality institutions, which need to prevail in any country.
topic corruption
fiscal policy
comparative
panel analysis
url https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/1970
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