Civic Engagement as a Constraint on Corruption

Author(s)
Kenju Kamei, Louis Putterman, Katy Tabero, Jean-Robert Tyran
Abstract

Corruption is the great disease of government. It undermines the efficiency of the
public sector in many countries around the world. We experimentally study civic
engagement (CE) as a constraint on corruption when incentives are stacked
against providing CE. We show that CE is powerful in curbing corruption when
citizens can encourage each other to provide CE through social approval. Social
approval induces strategic complementarity among conditional cooperators which
counteracts the strategic substitutability (which tends to limit beneficial effects of
CE) built into our design. We also show that civic engagement in the lab is
correlated with civic engagement in the field, and that the effects of social
approval are surprisingly robust to framing in our setting.

Organisation(s)
Vienna Center for Experimental Economics, Department of Economics
External organisation(s)
Brown University, Keio University, University of Southampton
No. of pages
56
Publication date
12-2024
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
502057 Experimental economics, 502010 Public finance
Keywords
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/3c7a26db-83b4-4de9-95c8-a6d40292f6cf