一个普通话惠及整个家族:专制国家的家乡基础设施和裙带关系

Kieu-Trang Nguyen, Quoc-Anh Do, Anh Tran
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引用次数: 13

摘要

本文研究专制政权下政府官员的裙带关系。我们收集了越南官员政治晋升的独特数据集,并估计了他们对家乡公共基础设施的影响。我们发现,在一些结果上,包括通往村庄的道路、市场、清洁水的获取、学前教育、灌溉和当地广播电台,以及家乡从国家的“贫困社区支持计划”中受益的倾向,有很强的积极影响,其中一些有滞后效应。裙带关系不仅限于高层官员,甚至在那些对家乡预算没有直接权力的官员中也很普遍,当家乡主席和晋升官员的年龄接近时,以及省级领导在制定政策方面拥有更大的自由裁量权时,裙带关系就会更加强烈,这表明裙带关系通过基于特定政治权力和环境的非正式渠道发挥作用。与民主议会中的猪肉桶政治相反,越南立法机构的成员对其家乡的基础设施投资几乎没有影响力。考虑到政治晋升自上而下的本质,官员们可能不会帮助他们的小公社来换取政治支持。与此相一致的是,官员们只支持自己的家乡公社,而忽略了可能提供更大政治支持的家乡地区。这些发现表明,裙带关系的动机是官员对其相关圈子的社会偏好,这标志着一种额外的腐败形式,可能在透明度低的发展中国家普遍存在。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
One Mandarin Benefits the Whole Clan: Hometown Infrastructure and Nepotism in an Autocracy
This paper studies nepotism by government officials in an authoritarian regime. We collect a unique dataset of political promotions of officials in Vietnam and estimate their impact on public infrastructure in their hometowns. We find strong positive effects on several outcomes, some with lags, including roads to villages, marketplaces, clean water access, preschools, irrigation, and local radio broadcasters, as well as the hometown’s propensity to benefit from the State’s “poor commune support program”. Nepotism is not limited to only top-level officials, pervasive even among those without direct authority over hometown budgets, stronger when the hometown chairperson’s and promoted official’s ages are closer, and where provincial leadership has more discretionary power in shaping policies, suggesting that nepotism works through informal channels based on specific political power and environment. Contrary to pork barrel politics in democratic parliaments, members of the Vietnamese legislative body have little influence on infrastructure investments for their hometowns. Given the top-down nature of political promotions, officials arguably do not help their tiny communes in exchange for political support. Consistent with that, officials favor only their home commune and ignore their home district, which could offer larger political support. These findings suggest that nepotism is motivated by officials’ social preferences directed towards their related circles, and signals an additional form of corruption that may prevail in developing countries with low transparency.
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