Abstract:
It is well acknowledged that corruption is rampant in low-income countries. However, there is a
less than ideal propensity to take action against it. Lack of information is one important factor
that might explain why citizens don’t take an initiative to fight against it. Another important
issue is citizens’ ability to co-ordinate with each other to reduce corruption. This implies that
when individuals decide to take an action, they need to have some knowledge about whether
and how others are going to act, since the success or failure of many anti-corruption efforts
depend on individual actors being able to co-ordinate. The first essay addresses the importance
of these two channels in context of anti-corruption actions. Building on the same context, the
second essay posits that the drive to take actions against corruption might be strong when major
crisis or disaster is fresh in the memory, thereby making it more personal. A period of crisis
heightens public attention- a fact that is not lost on politicians / public officials. The third essay
explores the delivery of a public good in the context of a period when there is heightened public
attention during the electoral term of an incumbent politician. Anticipating such behavior from
the public, politicians might time their actions in a way that would be more rewarding or to their
advantage. Through the third essay, we empirically test if such a manipulation can be detected in
the provision of an important public good, both in terms of its quantity and quality.
In the first essay, we conduct an online experiment to test whether increasing awareness
of corrupt practices and/or updating beliefs about others willingness to take action against
corruption affects individuals’ own anti-corruption efforts in the health sector during the ongoingCOVID-19 pandemic. Subjects from India are randomized into three treatment groups. In the
first treatment, subjects are exposed to increased awareness about corruption. In the second,we correct their misaligned beliefs about others’ willingness to stand up against corruption and
in the third treatment, subjects are exposed to both increased awareness and belief correction.
Within each treatment group we randomly assign subjects to different anti-corruption actions that
vary in their private costs and expected benefits. Our results indicate that our treatments’ impact
on subjects’ personal decision to act depends on the relative costs and benefits of anti-corruption
actions.
In the second essay, we exploit the unexpected occurrence of a health crisis to answer if
critical junctures drive citizens’ motivation to fight corruption. We elicit perceptions about
corruption in the health sector and the willingness to act against it in an online survey, conducted
with nearly 900 men during the height of the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in India
between March and July 2021. We assess how these measures changed with the severity of
the pandemic during this period, using both real-effort and hypothetical measures of citizen
activism. We find a significant surge in the proportion of respondents agreeing to participate in
protests after the COVID-19 peak, as well as in the willingness to take anti-corruption actions.
Furthermore, we observe a substantial increase in subjects’ perception of corruption and their
level of information on citizen rights and entitlements during the same period. The evidence,therefore, suggests that the second wave of the pandemic not only acted as a focal point leading to
greater willingness to act, but it also increased the probability of citizens taking an anti-corruption
action.
In the final essay, we analyze the incentive of politicians to engage in corrupt behavior-
specifically through their predisposition to adjust policies in systematic ways - around elections
in India. We leverage a nationwide road program covering 150,000 roads from 18 large Indian
states to demonstrate the presence of election cycle progressively through different stages of
program implementation over two decades. Through heterogeneity analysis, we document
that politicians are more likely to increase project sanctions in areas with low literacy, but not
subsequently improve project award and completion. Additionally, re-election chances are
positively correlated with increase in project awards, but tighter electoral competition is unlikely
to explain the continuance of electoral cycle in this program; rather, it acts as a force of scrutiny,
likely increasing the efficiency of road delivery around elections.