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Identity and Corruption: A Laboratory Experiment

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  • Cubel, Maria
  • Papadopoulou, Anastasia
  • Sanchez-Pages, Santiago

Abstract

This paper explores the role of identity in voters’ decision to retain corrupt politicians. We build up a model of electoral accountability with pure moral hazard and bring it to the lab. Politicians must decide whether to invest in a public project with uncertain returns or to keep the funds for themselves. Voters observe the outcome of the project but not the action of the politician; if the project is unsuccessful, they do not know whether it was because of bad luck or because the politician embezzled the funds. We run two treatments; a control treatment and a treatment where subjects are assigned an identity using the minimal group paradigm. Our main result is that, upon observing a failed project, voters approve politicians of their same identity group significantly more often than in the control and compared to politicians of a different group. This is partially driven by a belief on same-identity politicians being more honest. We also observe that subjects acting as politicians are much more honest than expected by the equilibrium prediction.

Suggested Citation

  • Cubel, Maria & Papadopoulou, Anastasia & Sanchez-Pages, Santiago, 2022. "Identity and Corruption: A Laboratory Experiment," SocArXiv 9ch2d, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:9ch2d
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/9ch2d
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    1. Torsten Persson & Guido Tabellini, 2002. "Political Economics: Explaining Economic Policy," MIT Press Books, The MIT Press, edition 1, volume 1, number 0262661314, December.
    2. Lane, Tom, 2016. "Discrimination in the laboratory: A meta-analysis of economics experiments," European Economic Review, Elsevier, vol. 90(C), pages 375-402.
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