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Predictable Corruption and Firm Investment: Evidence from a Natural Experiment and Survey of Cambodian Entrepreneurs
Abstract
This paper utilizes a unique dataset of 500 firms in ten Cambodian provinces and a
natural experiment to test a long-held convention in political economy that the predictability
of a corruption is at least as important for firm investment decisions as the amount
of bribes a firm must pay, provided the bribes are not prohibitively expensive. Our
results suggest that this hypothesis is correct. Firms exposed to a shock to their
bribe schedules by a change in governor invest significantly less in subsequent periods,
as they wait for new information about their new chief executive. Furthermore, the
amount of corruption (both measured by survey data and proxied by the number of commercial
sex workers) is significantly lower in provinces with new governors. Our findings
are robust to a battery of firm-level controls and province-level investment climate
measures. © 2008 E. J. Malesky and K. Samphantharak.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17771Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1561/100.00008013Publication Info
Malesky, EJ; & Samphantharak, K (2008). Predictable Corruption and Firm Investment: Evidence from a Natural Experiment and
Survey of Cambodian Entrepreneurs. Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 3(3). pp. 227-267. 10.1561/100.00008013. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17771.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Edmund Malesky
Professor of Political Science
Malesky is a specialist on Southeast Asia, particularly Vietnam. Currently, Malesky's
research agenda is very much at the intersection of Comparative and International
Political Economy, falling into three major categories: 1) Authoritarian political
institutions and their consequences; 2) The political influence of foreign direct
investment and multinational corporations; and 3) Political institutions, private
business development, and formalization.

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