

We analyze how corruption affects incentives to invest or contribute to public goods. We obtain a proxy for corruption among Liberian community leaders by keeping track of a flow of inputs associated with a development intervention, measuring these inputs before and after giving them in custody to the chief. We then use the "gap" between these measurements ("missing inputs") to explain variation in investment behavior of villagers. Investment behavior is gauged with two simple artefactual field experiments. Our main results are that corruption (i) undermines incentives for voluntary contributions to local public goods and (ii) may reduce private investments of individuals subject to rent-seeking by the chief in real life. We also provide weaker evidence that the impact of corruption on investments and contributions to public goods is heterogeneous: this impact may be gender-specific and appears to vary with accessibility of communities. © 2014 Elsevier B.V.
| Funding sponsor | Funding number | Acronym |
|---|---|---|
| United States Institute of Peace See opportunities by USIP | 077-09 F | USIP |
| Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek | 453-10-001 | NWO |
We are grateful for financial support from NWO (NWO grant # 453-10-001) and the United States Institute of Peace (USIP grant # 077-09 F) and for logistical support from ZOA. Furthermore, we would like to thank two anonymous referees and seminar participants at the universities of Amsterdam, Antwerp, As, Bergen, Berlin, Geneve, Kiel, Oxford, Prague, Tilburg, Vienna and Wageningen for comments and suggestions. Froukje Pelsma has provided excellent research assistance in Liberia. Remaining errors are our own.
Beekman, G.; Development Economics Group, Wageningen University, P.O. Box 8130, Netherlands;
© Copyright 2014 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.