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A Model of Public Choice with Clientelism and Corruption: Introducing the Analytical

In: Analytical Narrative on Subnational Democracies in Colombia

Author

Listed:
  • Andrés Cendales

    (Universidad de los Andes)

  • Nestor Garza

    (California State University)

  • Santiago Arroyo

    (Universidad del Valle)

Abstract

This chapter introduces a model of public choice with the purpose of explaining the existing relationship between clientelism, corruption, public expenditure, and the quality of public policy, at the municipal level. The model has as reference, the municipal political system that is configured at a later time to the political, administrative, and fiscal decentralization of 1991 in Colombia. In consequence, based on this narrative about the evolution of the Colombian Pacific political regime and the qualitative evidence it provides, we would like to build a theoretical model in the context of game theory. If the equilibrium strategies of the players coincide with their strategies detected in the pattern of institutional behavior, it will be affirmed that the theoretical model explains the behavior patterns detected in the narrative. Our main contribution is to demonstrate the following result: The faction that wins the elections for the mayor’s office is the one for which the average expenditure of obtaining one vote is the lowest, due to its capacity to hire the grass-roots politicians with the greatest social capital, and to whom the highest salaries are paid. Once this political faction obtains control of the mayor’s office, it seeks to assign public contracts to members of its organization in a corrupt manner. This has the purpose of misappropriating, for private consumption, a certain amount of those public resources from such public contracts. The aforementioned contributes to a reduction in the quality of public policy, in such a way that this reduction will be greater whenever the assessment that the faction has for the provision of public goods diminishes, or the average expenditure incurred by the faction increases, in obtaining a vote in the elections. As a corollary to the above, it is possible to affirm that the greater the number of mayorships under the control of political factions, the greater the deterioration in the quality of public policy at the local level.

Suggested Citation

  • Andrés Cendales & Nestor Garza & Santiago Arroyo, 2019. "A Model of Public Choice with Clientelism and Corruption: Introducing the Analytical," SpringerBriefs in Economics, in: Analytical Narrative on Subnational Democracies in Colombia, chapter 0, pages 65-83, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:spbchp:978-3-030-13009-1_3
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-13009-1_3
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