Extending Research on Corruption to Specific Features of PFM Systems

Posted by Francois Michel

If one wanted to summarize briefly how research on corruption has evolved in recent years, one could say that it has made progress in four different areas:

Covermedium_2 The recent article “Bribery and public procurement: an experimental study” (Public Choice; Oct2008) from Susanne Büchner, Andreas Freytag, Luis González and Werner Güth belongs to the fourth category. The article’s model focuses on how bidders solve a tradeoff between price-oriented and bribe-oriented competition. It predicts actual pricing and bribing by (risk-neutral) competing bidders.

But this article is especially interesting in its account of a laboratory test of the model, a carefully designed game involving a total of 114 participants. While not fully confirming the model’s predictions of bidders’ strategies, the experience still provides some very insightful information on how individual pricing and bribing decisions are formed. Overall, the experience confirms that bidders engage actively—though with much variation in individual behavior—in bribery, whether or not bribes are framed as socially detrimental.

A similar approach could be usefully applied to testing specific features of PFM systems—in particular of internal and external control systems—designed to reduce corruption. For example, one could model and test how transparency and the modalities and strength of ex post controls—probability of contract audits, quality of these audits, etc.—impact bureaucrats’ inclinations to accept bribes.

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