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Corruption’s Impact on Welfare Spending: A Panel Data Analysis

Kleja, Leo LU (2022) NEKH03 20221
Department of Economics
Abstract
The existence of corruption poses challenges for governments worldwide attempting to implement certain policies as well as organizing their economy. Not only can widespread corruption threaten the rule of law and legal order but also the trust in and legitimacy of public institutions. The aim of the study was to investigate possible relationships between corruption and public expenditure on healthcare spending, education spending and expenditure on social services. To analyze the effect of corruption on the share of public spending allocated towards these selected welfare policies, a fixed effects panel data regression model was used. Data on corruption from a total of 178 countries was collected through Transparency International’s... (More)
The existence of corruption poses challenges for governments worldwide attempting to implement certain policies as well as organizing their economy. Not only can widespread corruption threaten the rule of law and legal order but also the trust in and legitimacy of public institutions. The aim of the study was to investigate possible relationships between corruption and public expenditure on healthcare spending, education spending and expenditure on social services. To analyze the effect of corruption on the share of public spending allocated towards these selected welfare policies, a fixed effects panel data regression model was used. Data on corruption from a total of 178 countries was collected through Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index (CPI), an organization working to combat and measure corruption on an international level. The CPI was standardized in 2012, being the logical starting year of this study. In total, the database contained 11 679 observations (including control variables) for the years 2012-2020. The panel data analyses showed that there was a significant negative relationship between corruption and healthcare spending. Similarly, there was a nearly significant negative relationship between corruption and education spending. Thus, the results obtained supports the hypothesis that corruption decrease certain shares of welfare spending as part of public expenditure. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Kleja, Leo LU
supervisor
organization
course
NEKH03 20221
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Corruption, Public spending, Panel data, Fixed effects regression
language
English
id
9098496
date added to LUP
2022-10-10 09:12:17
date last changed
2022-10-10 09:12:17
@misc{9098496,
  abstract     = {{The existence of corruption poses challenges for governments worldwide attempting to implement certain policies as well as organizing their economy. Not only can widespread corruption threaten the rule of law and legal order but also the trust in and legitimacy of public institutions. The aim of the study was to investigate possible relationships between corruption and public expenditure on healthcare spending, education spending and expenditure on social services. To analyze the effect of corruption on the share of public spending allocated towards these selected welfare policies, a fixed effects panel data regression model was used. Data on corruption from a total of 178 countries was collected through Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index (CPI), an organization working to combat and measure corruption on an international level. The CPI was standardized in 2012, being the logical starting year of this study. In total, the database contained 11 679 observations (including control variables) for the years 2012-2020. The panel data analyses showed that there was a significant negative relationship between corruption and healthcare spending. Similarly, there was a nearly significant negative relationship between corruption and education spending. Thus, the results obtained supports the hypothesis that corruption decrease certain shares of welfare spending as part of public expenditure.}},
  author       = {{Kleja, Leo}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Corruption’s Impact on Welfare Spending: A Panel Data Analysis}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}