Institute for Economic and Social Research – Faculty of Economics and Business – Universitas Indonesia

Search
Close this search box.

Corruption in Indonesia

Monday February 24th, 2014

Abstract:

Bribes by firms in Indonesia arise principally from regulations –licenses and levies –imposed by local government officials. Regulations generate direct revenues (fees) plus indirect revenues in the form of bribes. The expected value of the latter is capitalized into lower salaries needed by localities to compensate public officials. Localities in Indonesia are hampered by insufficient revenues from formal tax and transfer sources to pay competitive salaries plus fund demanded’ levels of public services, because local tax rates are capped by the center and inter-governmental transfers are limited. Thus the direct and indirect revenues from local regulations are critical to local finances. The paper models and estimates the key aspects of corruption — the relationship between bribes, time spent with local officials, and different forms of regulation. It models how inter-jurisdictional competition for firms limits the extent of local regulation and how greater sources of tax or inter-governmental revenues reduce the need for regulation and corruption. The paper estimates a large reduction in regulation in better funded localities. The findings are directly relevant to Indonesia where corruption is high and the country is in the throes of major decentralization and local democratization efforts.

For full article, click the following link: http://www.nber.org/papers/w10674.pdf

Recent Post

Macroeconomic Analysis Series: Monthly Inflation, April 2024

Thursday April 4th, 2024

LABOR MARKET BRIEF: Volume 5, Number 3, March 2024

Friday March 29th, 2024

The Impact of COVID-19 on Voter Turnout in the 2020 Regional Elections in Indonesia: Do Voters Care About Health Risks?

Thursday March 21st, 2024

Macroeconomic Analysis Series: BI Board of Governor Meeting, March 2024

Wednesday March 20th, 2024

Related Post

inflasi april

Thursday April 4th, 2024

Macroeconomic Analysis Series: Monthly Inflation, April 2024

Friday March 29th, 2024

LABOR MARKET BRIEF: Volume 5, Number 3, March 2024

COVID-19 on Voter

Thursday March 21st, 2024

The Impact of COVID-19 on Voter Turnout in the 2020 Regional Elections in Indonesia: Do Voters Care About Health Risks?

Translate »