Live Free Or Bribe: On The Causal Dynamics Between Economic Freedom and Corruption in U.S. States

We investigate the relationship between economic freedom and corruption using data from U.S. states covering almost a quarter of a century. Our study advances the existing literature on several fronts. First, instead of using subjective cross-country corruption indices assembled by various investmen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Apergis, Nicholas, Dincer, O., Payne, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier BV * North-Holland 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/29915
Description
Summary:We investigate the relationship between economic freedom and corruption using data from U.S. states covering almost a quarter of a century. Our study advances the existing literature on several fronts. First, instead of using subjective cross-country corruption indices assembled by various investment risk services, we use a more objective measure of corruption: the number of government officials convicted in a state for crimes related to corruption. Second, unlike previous studies, we exploit both time series and cross-sectional variation in the data in the estimation of a panel error correction model. The panel error correction model results show that in the long-run economic freedom, per capita income, and education have a negative and statistically significant impact on corruption whereas income inequality has a positive and statistically significant impact. The causality tests associated with the panel error correction model reveal bidirectional causality between economic freedom and corruption in both the short-run and long-run.