Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
Economics is a powerful tool for the analysis of corruption. Cultural differences and morality provide nuance and subtlety, but an economic approach is fundamental to understanding where corrupt incentives are the greatest and have the biggest impact. In an earlier book, Corruption: A Study in Political Economy (1978), I made this point for an audience of economists and technically trained political scientists. Twenty years later I hope to broaden my audience and deepen my analysis with a new book that focuses on the way corruption affects developing countries and those in transition from state socialism.
The growing interest in institutional issues among development economists encouraged me to make this effort. The study of corruption forces scholars and policy makers to focus on the tension between self-seeking behavior and public values. Those worried about the development failures common throughout the world must confront the problem of corruption and the weak and arbitrary state structures that feed it.
In 1995–1996 I was a Visiting Research Fellow at the World Bank in Washington, D.C. Since I previously had focused on public policy problems in the United States and Western Europe, a year at the World Bank was a transformative experience. I learned a tremendous amount, not just by reading whatever was at hand, but also by using the Bank's e-mail system to track down lunch partners with complementary interests. For a scholar used to sitting alone before a computer, the year in Washington was a welcome and energizing change.
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- Corruption and GovernmentCauses, Consequences, and Reform, pp. xi - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999