Published on 01 January 2021 |
Data for: "Jobs for Sale: Corruption and Misallocation in Hiring"
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Corrupt government hiring is common in developing countries. This paper uses original data to document the operation and consequences of corrupt hiring in a health bureaucracy. Hires pay bribes averaging 17 months of salary, but contrary to conventional wisdom, their observable quality is comparable to counterfactual merit-based hires. Exploiting variation across jobs, I show that the consequences of corrupt allocations depend on the correlation between wealth and quality among applicants: service delivery outcomes are good for jobs where this was positive and poor when negative. In this setting, the parameter was typically positive, leading to relatively good performance of hires.
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Publication Details
DOI
Publisher
ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research
Subfield
Sociology and Political Science
Field
Social Sciences
Domain
Social Sciences
Confidence Score
43%
Source
Scholar Data Model