Working Paper

Power over Prosecutors Corrupts Politicians: Cross Country Evidence Using a New Indicator

Anne van Aaken, Lars P. Feld, Stefan Voigt
CESifo, Munich, 2008

CESifo Working Paper No. 2245

It is hypothesized that prosecution agencies that are dependent on the executive have less incentives to prosecute crimes committed by government members which, in turn, increases their incentives to commit such crimes. Here, this hypothesis is put to an empirical test focusing on a particular kind of crime, namely corruption. In order to test it, it was necessary to create an indicator measuring de jure as well as de facto independence of the prosecution agencies. The regressions show that de facto independence of prosecution agencies robustly reduces corruption of officials.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Keywords: corruption, prosecution agencies, judicial independence and positive constitutional economics
JEL Classification: H110,K400,K420