The Marginal Disutility from Corruption in Social Programs: Evidence from Program Administrators and Beneficiaries
Author(s)
Gaduh, Arya; Hanna, Rema; Olken, Benjamin A.
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Concerns about fraud in welfare programs are common arguments worldwide against such programs. We conducted a survey experiment with over 28,000 welfare program administrators and over 19,000 beneficiaries in Indonesia to elicit the “marginal disutility from corruption”—the trade-off between more generous social assistance and losses due to corruption. Merely mentioning corruption reduced perceived program success, equivalent to distributing more than 26 percentage points less aid. However, respondents were not sensitive to the amount of corruption—respondents were willing to trade off $2 of additional losses for an additional $1 distributed to beneficiaries. Program administrators and beneficiaries had similar assessments. (JEL D73, H53, I32, I38, O15, O17).
Date issued
2024-03-01Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of EconomicsJournal
American Economic Review: Insights
Publisher
American Economic Association
Citation
Gaduh, Arya, Rema Hanna, and Benjamin A. Olken. 2024. "The Marginal Disutility from Corruption in Social Programs: Evidence from Program Administrators and Beneficiaries." American Economic Review: Insights, 6 (1): 105-19.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2640-205X
2640-2068
Keywords
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law, Geography, Planning and Development