Punishing personal and electoral corruption: Experimental evidence from India

A growing literature examines the effect of corruption on political behavior. However, little attention has been paid so far to the fact that politicians engage in it for various reasons and with different welfare consequences. In this article, I argue that voters judge corrupt politicians different...

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Main Author: Simon Weschle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-05-01
Series:Research & Politics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168016645136
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spelling doaj-96ff5e33ffdc451e8a44af42a47d6b132020-11-25T03:27:54ZengSAGE PublishingResearch & Politics2053-16802016-05-01310.1177/205316801664513610.1177_2053168016645136Punishing personal and electoral corruption: Experimental evidence from IndiaSimon WeschleA growing literature examines the effect of corruption on political behavior. However, little attention has been paid so far to the fact that politicians engage in it for various reasons and with different welfare consequences. In this article, I argue that voters judge corrupt politicians differently depending on what the money is used for. I show results from a survey experiment in India in which respondents heard about a politician who accepted money for a political favor. One treatment group was told that the politician used the money to personally enrich himself (personal corruption), while the other group was informed that he used it to buy votes (electoral corruption). Respondents who received the vote buying treatment were clearly and consistently less likely to agree with a series of potential punishments. This suggests that the overall welfare consequences of corrupt exchanges are an important factor when voters decide how to judge offending politicians.https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168016645136
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simon Weschle
spellingShingle Simon Weschle
Punishing personal and electoral corruption: Experimental evidence from India
Research & Politics
author_facet Simon Weschle
author_sort Simon Weschle
title Punishing personal and electoral corruption: Experimental evidence from India
title_short Punishing personal and electoral corruption: Experimental evidence from India
title_full Punishing personal and electoral corruption: Experimental evidence from India
title_fullStr Punishing personal and electoral corruption: Experimental evidence from India
title_full_unstemmed Punishing personal and electoral corruption: Experimental evidence from India
title_sort punishing personal and electoral corruption: experimental evidence from india
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Research & Politics
issn 2053-1680
publishDate 2016-05-01
description A growing literature examines the effect of corruption on political behavior. However, little attention has been paid so far to the fact that politicians engage in it for various reasons and with different welfare consequences. In this article, I argue that voters judge corrupt politicians differently depending on what the money is used for. I show results from a survey experiment in India in which respondents heard about a politician who accepted money for a political favor. One treatment group was told that the politician used the money to personally enrich himself (personal corruption), while the other group was informed that he used it to buy votes (electoral corruption). Respondents who received the vote buying treatment were clearly and consistently less likely to agree with a series of potential punishments. This suggests that the overall welfare consequences of corrupt exchanges are an important factor when voters decide how to judge offending politicians.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168016645136
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