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38 Crime L. & Soc. Change 1 (2002)

handle is hein.journals/crmlsc38 and id is 1 raw text is: #    Crime, Law & Social Change 38: 1-32, 2002.
© 2002 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands.
Explaining corruption: An institutional choice approach *
MICHAEL W. COLLIER
Department of International Relations, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199,
USA (e-mail: collierm@fiu.edu)
Abstract. The end of the Cold War, the strengthening of world democracy, and the advance-
ment of neoliberal economic reforms, have exposed corruption as a major world problem and
spawned a plethora of international and national anti-corruption programs. Past theorizing has
increased our knowledge about corruption, however, an interdisciplinary (political, economic,
cultural) theory of the causes of political corruption has never emerged. This article develops a
middle-range interdisciplinary theory of the causes of corruption built through employment of
an institutional choice analytic frame. The analytic frame draws on the Institutional Analysis
and Development work of Elinor Ostrom, Roy Gardner, & James Walker, and the constructiv-
ist work of Nicholas Onuf. The resultant theory is advanced through a statistical analysis. The
article concludes that ongoing international and national anti-corruption programs will likely
fail unless they include reforms to state internal power structures and political cultures.
Introduction
Corruption - the abuse of public office for private gain - emerged as an
important foreign policy issue after the Cold War. Make no mistake, the
world was far from corruption-free before the fall of the Berlin Wall. In the
Western and Soviet Cold War struggle for spheres of influence, corruption in
the superpowers' client-states was treated like the proverbial elephant stand-
ing in the living room, an aberration obvious to everyone but that no one
dared talk about. As post-Cold War emphases on democratization and free
trade lifted the shroud of silence surrounding corruption, the World Bank
and International Monetary Fund confirmed what scholars alleged for dec-
ades, that corruption adversely affects both developed and developing states.
Corruption significantly reduces state economic growth by diverting valuable
resources and lowering investment rates.1 Corruption seriously degrades the
welfare of a state's poorest citizens by increasing income inequalities and
causing the under-funding of education and health programs.2 Corruption
also becomes a threat to the very security of many states when, in alliance
* An earlier version of this article was co-winner of the Alexander George Award for
best graduate student paper in the Foreign Policy Analysis Section, International Studies
Association conference, February 1999, Washington DC.

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