Can Resource Windfalls Reduce Corruption? The Role of Term Limits

Ohad Raveh, Y. Tsur
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Abstract

We find that, in democratic regimes with unlimited reelection, the answer to the question posed above is in the affirmative, contrasting a widely held view. The reason is that resource windfalls increase future graft prospects, motivating opportunistic incumbents to postpone their planned embezzlement, which in turn requires them to seek reelection and behave well in order to increase the reelection chances. Term limits mitigate, and may even reverse, this effect directly, by forcing incumbents that otherwise would seek reelection to step down, and indirectly, by increasing the potential graft that induces incumbents to seek reelection. We test the model's predictions using a panel of U.S. states over the period 1976-2007. Our identification strategy rests on constitutionally-entrenched differences in gubernatorial term limits, and geographically-based cross-state differences in natural resource endowments. Our baseline estimates point at a sizeable impact. We find that a one standard deviation increase in resource windfalls decreases the average corruption level in states with no term limits by 15%, but increases average corruption in states with term limits by 8%. These results suggest that the nature of political institutions is important for understanding the nexus between resource windfalls and corruption.
资源暴利能减少腐败吗?任期限制的作用
我们发现,在无限制连任的民主政权中,对上述问题的回答是肯定的,这与广泛持有的观点形成了对比。原因是,资源意外之财增加了未来贪污的可能性,促使机会主义的现任者推迟计划中的贪污,这反过来又要求他们寻求连任,并表现良好,以增加连任的机会。任期限制直接缓解、甚至可能逆转这一影响,因为它迫使原本寻求连任的现任官员下台;间接地,它增加了潜在的腐败行为,诱使现任官员寻求连任。我们用1976-2007年期间美国各州的一组数据来检验该模型的预测。我们的识别策略依赖于宪法规定的州长任期限制的差异,以及基于地理位置的自然资源禀赋的跨州差异。我们的基线估计表明影响相当大。我们发现,在没有任期限制的州,资源意外之财每增加一个标准差,平均腐败程度就会降低15%,但在有任期限制的州,平均腐败程度会增加8%。这些结果表明,政治制度的性质对于理解资源意外之财与腐败之间的关系非常重要。
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