Affiliation:
1. Harvard University, 79 JFK Street, Mailbox 26, Cambridge, MA 02138 (email: )
2. Wharton, 1456 Steinberg Hall-Dietrich Hall, 3620 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104 (email: )
Abstract
Students in India who cheat on a simple laboratory task are more likely to prefer public sector jobs. This paper shows that cheating on this task predicts corrupt behavior by civil servants, implying that it is a meaningful predictor of future corruption. Students who demonstrate pro-social preferences are less likely to prefer government jobs, while outcomes on an explicit game and attitudinal measures to measure corruption do not systematically predict job preferences. A screening process that chooses high-ability applicants would not alter the average propensity for corruption. The findings imply that differential selection into government may contribute, in part, to corruption. (JEL C91, D12, D73, H83, K42, O12, O17)
Publisher
American Economic Association
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Cited by
113 articles.
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