Seize the state, seize the day: state capture and influence in transition economies |
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Authors: | Joel S. Hellman Geraint Jones Daniel Kaufmann |
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Affiliation: | a The World Bank, 1818 H Street, Washington, DC 20433, USA;b Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 50 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA |
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Abstract: | Data from the 1999 Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Survey is used to examine state capture and influence in transition economies. We find that a capture economy has emerged in many transition countries, where rent-generating advantages are sold by public officials and politicians to private firms. While influence is a legacy of the past inherited by large, incumbent firms with existing ties to the state, state capture is a strategic choice made primarily by large de novo firms competing against influential incumbents. Captor firms, in high-capture economies, enjoy private advantages in terms of more protection of their own property rights and superior firm performance. Despite the private gains to captor firms, state capture is associated at the aggregate level with social costs in the form of weaker economy-wide firm performance. Journal of Comparative Economics 31 (4) (2003) 751–773. |
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Keywords: | Capture Corruption Influence Property rights State capture Transition economies |
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