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Bribery, corruption and bureaucratic hassle: Evidence from Myanmar

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 01:36 authored by Aaron Soans, Masato Abe
Corruption has been found to be the most severe obstacle to business operations, according to a recent survey of over 3000 firms in Myanmar. This paper sets out to understand the structure of corruption through an econometric analysis of this survey. It finds that firms with higher 'ability to pay' (proxied by sales revenue and employee growth) are more likely to pay bribes. While firms with lower 'refusal power' (i.e. those dependent on bureaucratic permissions to export and import) are more likely to find corruption to be an obstacle. A distinct but related question is whether bribes act as 'efficiency grease' by allowing firms to circumvent red tape. No evidence is found to support this hypothesis; in fact, firms that pay bribes report greater bureaucratic hassle compared to firms that do not. This result fits in more closely with the view that red tape could be used to extract bribes from firms.

History

Journal

Journal of Asian Economics

Volume

44

Start page

41

End page

56

Total pages

16

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 Elsevier Inc.

Former Identifier

2006062749

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-06-30

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