Mitigating Corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa: Does Heterogeneity in Corruption Levels Matter?
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Public Integrity
Abstract
In line with Africa’s Agenda 2063 goal 12 of improving governance and building accountability
institutions, this article contributes to the literature by examining corruption determinants using
survey data from the Afrobarometer. Quantile regression estimates across 31 sub-Saharan
African countries show that the effects of the determinants of corruption are heterogeneous
across the quantiles. We observe that press freedom, parliamentary oversight, and human development have a reducing effect on corruption, whereas government size, ethnic fractionalization,
and bureaucratic quality appear to exert a significant positive effect on corruption. Given the heterogeneity of findings, the “one size fits all” strategy in fighting corruption could be inadequate
in mitigating corruption in SSA.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
corruption, public sector, quantile regression