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Corruption in PPPs,incentives and contract incompleteness
Institution:1. University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy;2. CEPR, IEFE-Bocconi, Italy;3. Paris School of Economics-EHESS, France;1. School of Business, Renmin University of China, Beijing, China;2. Department of Economics, University of California, San Diego, USA;3. Department of Economics, University of Nevada, Reno, USA;4. Nanjing Audit University, Nanjing, China;1. School of Social Sciences, Singapore Management University, 90 Stamford Road, Level 4-96, 178903, Singapore;2. Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, 469B Bukit Timah Road #02-06, Level 2, Li Ka Sing Building, 259771, Singapore;1. Department of Construction Management, School of Economics and Management, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, Sichuan Province, 610031, P.R. China;2. School of Economics and Management, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, Sichuan Province, 610031, P.R. China;3. School of Business, Management and Social Sciences, Quest International University Perak, Malaysia;4. Power China South Construction Investment Co., LTD, 518000, P.R. China
Abstract:We analyze risk allocation and contractual choices when public procurement is plagued with moral hazard, private information on exogenous shocks, and threat of corruption. Complete contracts entail state-contingent clauses that compensate the contractor for shocks unrelated to his own effort. By improving insurance, those contracts reduce the agency cost of moral hazard. When the contractor has private information on revenues shocks, verifying messages on shocks realizations is costly. Incomplete contracts do not specify state-contingent clauses, thereby saving on verifiability costs. This makes incomplete contracts attractive even though they entail greater agency costs. Because of private information on contracting costs, a public official may have discretion to choose whether to procure under a complete or an incomplete contract. When the public official is corrupt, such delegation results in incomplete contracts being chosen too often. Empirical predictions on the use of incomplete contracts and policy implications on the benefits of standardized contracts are discussed.
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