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Financial
Liberalisation, Bureaucratic Corruption and Economic Development
Keith Blackburn
& Gonzalo F.
Forgues-Puccio
June 2008
We study
the effect of international financial integration on economic
development when the quality of governance may be compromised by
corruption. Our analysis is based on a dynamic general
equilibrium model of a small economy in which growth is driven
by capital accumulation and public policy is administered by
government-appointed bureaucrats. Corruption may arise due to
the opportunity for bureaucrats to embezzle public funds, an
opportunity that is made more attractive by financial
liberalisation which, at the same time, raises efficiency in
capital production. Our main results may be summarised as
follows: (1) corruption is always bad for economic development,
but its effect is worse if the economy is open than if it is
closed; (2) the incidence of corruption may, itself, be affected
by both the development and openness of the economy; (3)
financial liberalisation is good for development when governance
is good, but may be bad for development when governance is bad;
and (4) corruption and poverty may co-exist as permanent, rather
than just transitory, fixtures of an economy.
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