Published on 01 January 2021 |

Version v1

Data for: "Jobs for Sale: Corruption and Misallocation in Hiring"

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Weaver, Jeffrey

Description

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.

Citations (0)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

1.7

FAIR Score

69%

Citations

0

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Sociology and Political Science

Field

Social Sciences

Domain

Social Sciences

Confidence Score

43%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00