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Rent seeking and the economics of corruption


Type

Working Paper

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Authors

Aidt, T. S. 

Abstract

The paper studies the influence of Gordon Tullock (1967) and the rent-seeking literature more generally on the study of corruption. The theoretical corruption literature with its emphasis on principal-agent relationships within government and rent creation by corruption politicians has largely, but not entirely, overlooked that contestable rents encourage unproductive use of real resources in seeking these rents. As a consequence, the literature underestimates the value of corruption control and the cost of corruption itself.

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Keywords

Rent seeking, Corruption

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Publisher

Faculty of Economics

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