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Replicating Backfire Effects in Anti-Corruption Messaging: A Comment on Cheeseman and Peiffer (2022)

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Listed:
  • Bergeron-Boutin, Olivier
  • Ciobanu, Costin
  • Cohen, Guila
  • Erlich, Aaron

Abstract

Cheeseman and Peiffer (2022) field a survey experiment in Nigeria to test the effect of five different anti-corruption messages on participants' willingness to bribe public officials. They find that these messages generally fail to reduce bribes and could, in fact, increase bribes. They further show that these counterproductive effects of anti-corruption messages are especially pernicious for participants who believe corruption is widespread, whom they call "Pessimistic Perceivers." We find that Cheeseman and Peiffer's findings are computationally reproducible: using the same data and estimation procedures, we arrive at the same output reported in the original article. Furthermore, we find that following Cheeseman and Peiffer's strategy to dichotomize a three-item scale used as a moderating variable, their results are robust to different estimation strategies. However, we draw attention to several shortcomings of the original analysis. First, the distribution of the moderating variable is highly skewed: on a 0-1 scale, the mean value is 0.81. Cheeseman and Peiffer's dichotomization procedure is also sensitive to the cutoff threshold and produces unstable results. Similarly, when we employ more flexible estimation strategies for heterogeneous treatment effects when the moderator is measured on a continuous scale, the results appear less robust.

Suggested Citation

  • Bergeron-Boutin, Olivier & Ciobanu, Costin & Cohen, Guila & Erlich, Aaron, 2023. "Replicating Backfire Effects in Anti-Corruption Messaging: A Comment on Cheeseman and Peiffer (2022)," I4R Discussion Paper Series 94, The Institute for Replication (I4R).
  • Handle: RePEc:zbw:i4rdps:94
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Arel-Bundock, Vincent & Briggs, Ryan C. & Doucouliagos, Hristos & Mendoza Aviña, Marco & Stanley, Tom D., 2022. "Quantitative Political Science Research is Greatly Underpowered," I4R Discussion Paper Series 6, The Institute for Replication (I4R).
    2. Cheeseman, Nic & Peiffer, Caryn, 2022. "The Curse of Good Intentions: Why Anticorruption Messaging Can Encourage Bribery," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 116(3), pages 1081-1095, August.
    3. Hainmueller, Jens & Mummolo, Jonathan & Xu, Yiqing, 2019. "How Much Should We Trust Estimates from Multiplicative Interaction Models? Simple Tools to Improve Empirical Practice," Political Analysis, Cambridge University Press, vol. 27(2), pages 163-192, April.
    4. Jacob M. Montgomery & Brendan Nyhan & Michelle Torres, 2018. "How Conditioning on Posttreatment Variables Can Ruin Your Experiment and What to Do about It," American Journal of Political Science, John Wiley & Sons, vol. 62(3), pages 760-775, July.
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    Keywords

    Replication study; Corruption; Nigeria;
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