Abstract
A model of entrepreneurial choices in an economy with a corrupt public procurement sector is built, providing predictions along two main dimensions. First, corruption is more frequent in sectors where public institutions are large buyers. Second, firms favoured with corrupt contracts enjoy extra returns, so that procurement related activities attract the best entrepreneurs. A large scale microeconomic database, including all public procurement operations over a 4 year period in Paraguay, amounting annually to approximately 6% of the country’s GDP, is then used to corroborate these predictions.
Keywords
Procurement; Corruption; Rent-seeking; Development;
JEL codes
- H57: Procurement
- D73: Bureaucracy • Administrative Processes in Public Organizations • Corruption
- D72: Political Processes: Rent-Seeking, Lobbying, Elections, Legislatures, and Voting Behavior
- O5: Economywide Country Studies
Replaces
Emmanuelle Auriol, Thomas Flochel, and Stéphane Straub, “Public Procurement and Rent-Seeking: The Case of Paraguay”, TSE Working Paper, n. 11-224, February 18, 2011, revised March 2015.
Reference
Emmanuelle Auriol, Thomas Flochel, and Stéphane Straub, “Public Procurement and Rent-Seeking: The Case of Paraguay”, World Development, vol. 77, January 2016, pp. 395–407.
See also
Published in
World Development, vol. 77, January 2016, pp. 395–407