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This paper examines the reasons why corruption and policy distortions tend to exhibit a high degree of persistence in certain regimes. We identify circumstances under which a firm seeks to evade regulations by (1) bribing of local inspectors, and (2) lobbying high-level government politicians to...
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In the behavioral industrial organization literature, market forces may not eliminate inefficiencies associated with biased consumers. Regulations usually exist that could, but we show that self-governing citizen-consumers will not always enact these welfare-improving policies. In a market for...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014195263
Why do bureaucratic principals appoint agents who hold different policy views from themselves? We posit an explanation based on the interplay between two types of agency costs: shirking on information production and policy bias. Principals employ biased agents because they shirk less. This...
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This paper examines the reasons why corruption and policy distortions tend to exhibit a high degree of persistence in certain regimes. We identify circumstances under which a firm seeks to evade regulations by (1) bribing of local inspectors and (2) lobbying high-level government politicians to...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012782668
This study shows that the level of trust matters for how corruption affects public policy outcomes in the long run, in particular with regard to the stringency of environmental policies. We argue that the level of trust affects the relative strength of industry and environmental lobby groups,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014152410