Corruption
is an economic evil( published in monitor on the 20th august 2015)
On the 11th August 2015,
while Andrew Mwenda was on NTV news night, he intimated that there is no
evidence that corruption is an impediment economic development anywhere in the
World. This statement is quite fallacious and ill-informed of the existing
empirical evidence. Mwenda's arguments
were premised on largely correlation to argue causality. Correlation however doesn't
mean causality. Secondly, while economic growth and economic development are
interchangeably used, they don’t mean the same. Economic development
encompasses economic growth plus social economic transformation like poverty
reduction, income inequality and improved human development indicators. A simplistic
(however, contentious) measure of economic development is GDP per capita with
countries that have a GDP per capita of USD 1045 are considered as low Income
countries.
In Mwenda's recent facebook post he argues
that estimated corruption of about 10% of the annual budget is not the cause of
bad services. He also points to the fact that recent efforts by Ministry of
Finance cleanup of the register to remove ghost workers saved 230 billion in a
wage bill of 3 trillion. That is about 7%. While, poor service delivery is a
manifestation of many factors including corruption, both are indicative of
institutional and regulatory weakness. These arguably are very costly to a
nation. To start with, 10% of the 2015/16 budget is UGX 1.85 trillion shillings
and only 3 sectors of works and transport, energy and education have more. This
amount compares favorably amount of interest payments by government for its
debts and more than the amount government intends to borrow from the domestic
market of UGX 1.4 trillion. The latter at current interest rates will attract
interest payments above UGX 200 billion (50% of the agriculture budget). In
short, if 10% of the budget is lost annually, a full year of the budget is lost
every 10 years.
Common in
literature and Mwenda's citation is the high-growth countries in East Asia exhibiting corruption tendencies
inter alia of - bribery, patrimonialism, cronyism, and rent-seeking. What
however, is often missed the primary growth drivers; inter alia the
institutional strength and factor productivity reforms that were encountered in
these economies. A recent study compares the Sub-Saharan Africa which includes
many countries that are stagnating in the category of low-income countries; the
same characteristics that were in many East Asian economies in the 1960s before
exhibiting spectacular growth performances onwards. This study shows that East
Asia has been characterised by growth-oriented governments and strong states,
which have had the capacity to contain corruption and prevent threshold effects
and the fall into lower equilibria. In East Asia, corruption exists but is
controlled, channelled, and submitted to growth objectives because states have
the capacity to achieve this.Forexample successful anticorruption campaigns in
both Singapore and Hong Kong, China were implemented when they were both still
relatively poor. In contrast, in Sub- Saharan
Africa, vicious circles and endogenous causalities may have created poverty traps,
where weak states, predatory political regimes, generalised corruption, commodity-based
market structures and windfall gains reinforce each other.
Corruption however is often intrinsically difficult to define and
measure, so institutional and regulatory capacity can be used as proxy for
corruption. Another commonly used is the Transparency International
corruption Index which examines over 175 countries. In the top 21 countries,
only 5 countries (New Zealand, Luxemburg, Iceland, Uruguay and Barbados) have a
GDP of less than USD 200 billion. Of the 21 most corrupt countries, 19 of them
have an annual GDP of less than $100 billion. The other two of Venezuela and
Iraq each have GDP of above USD 200 billion.
The majority of low income countries, also associated with low Human
Development Indicator scores, are associated with high corruption perception
and this negative correlation
provides prima facie evidence of the negative impact corruption has on
value creation.
The corruption
and economic growth consensus however remains mixed, with a few studies
indicating corruption can actually spur economic growth at least in the short
run. Essentially corruption (public) spurs private sector creation-as exhibited
by the growing private infrastructure and businesses but at the cost of public
infrastructure which is too is a fundamental driver of growth. Corruption breeds
ironies for example officials of ministry of education taking their kids to
private schools.
In a literal lenses( captioned from discussion with a few colleagues), I'll
illustrate with a few crude examples Police accepts bribes for issuance of
driving permits or let off a reckless driver – Now quantify the cost of lives
lost (include impact on dependants) and serious injuries due road carnage which
flourishes because of corruption has allowed untrained drivers/riders on the
road; Medical equipments are stolen, monies for repairs of equipments swindled,
drugs diverted to private clinics, medical doctors abscond from work, fake HiV
results, Global fund swindled etc – how many lives lost due to these malaise
(infant mortality, maternal mortality etc)? What are the social and economic
costs? Substandard roads works, axle load control disregarded, narrower roads,
roads without signs etc – how much damage to the economy that this cause? At
what cost? Teachers abscond, shoddy or incomplete classrooms constructed or
money swindled altogether hence the future of children, especially belong to
the poor is left in ruin. In economic terms, how much are the total cost of
these children's future. Pensioners are defrauded, ghosts earn more than real
people, real people are paid peanuts, not paid for months etc
Corruption may have considerable adverse effects on economic
growth, largely by reducing private investment, and perhaps by worsening the composition
of public expenditure and revenue, thereby undermining public trust in the government. This diminishes its ability
to fulfil its core task of providing adequate public services and a conducive
environment for private sector development. In the long run, corruption
associated growth may dwindle and wealth distribution challenges may entail the
delegitimization of the state, leading to severe political and economic
instability. Corruption in Uganda has to be dealt with head on, small or big
fish, and the quick wins start with addressing the inefficiencies in public
entities that are rated highest in receiving bribes. Welfare audits may also
come handy. Removing the Institutional and regulatory impediments to growth is
better than circumventing them by corruption.
No comments:
Post a Comment