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Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization

Corruption, Judicial Accountability and Inequality: Unfair Procedures May Benefit the Worst–Off

Journal Article
Reference
Berggren, Niclas and Christian Bjørnskov (2020). “Corruption, Judicial Accountability and Inequality: Unfair Procedures May Benefit the Worst–Off”. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 170, 341–354. doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2019.12.010

Authors
Niclas Berggren, Christian Bjørnskov

We ask whether, as many seem to think, corruption worsens, and judicial accountability improves, inequality, and investigate this empirically using data from 145 countries 1960–2014. We relate perceived corruption and de facto judicial accountability to gross-income inequality and consumption inequality. The study shows that corruption is negatively, and that judicial accountability is positively, related to both types of inequality. The estimates are particularly pronounced in democracies and arguably causal in the case of consumption inequality, which we show using a novel identification method indicating that the full effect only occurs after institutional stability has been established. The findings suggest that “unfair procedures” – corruption and deviations from judicial accountability – may benefit the economically worst off and worsen the situation of the economic elite.