Category: G. Corruption and Transparency
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Bill Gates downplays the corruption problem. He Should. In @BW.
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A CGD working paper with Bill Savedoff. A common objection to results-based programs is that they are somehow more vulnerable to corruption. This paper explains why results-based approaches to foreign aid may be less vulnerable to corruption than the traditional approaches which monitor and track the purchase and delivery of inputs and activities. The paper…
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Trust in gov't is down worldwide, suggesting it is more than the financial crisis. Time for more transparency.
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This CGD Policy Paper 11 argues for a citizen’s contract initiative that would exhort governments to “publish what you buy.” Greater transparency in contracting would improve and lower the costs of contracting outcomes to the benefit of governments, contractors, and citizens alike. This paper discusses some of those benefits. But regardless of efficiency concerns, citizens should…
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Contract publication for @BW.
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A Trio of Perspectives on Corruption: Bias, Speed Money and “Grand Theft Infrastructure” is a World Bank Working Paper on which I'm listed as an author but Michael Klein and Monika Sztajerowska did most of the work. A number of recent survey articles express hope that new data from enterprise surveys would shed new light…
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An opinion piece for the Journal Governance in which I argue governance matters less than usually thought and can change faster than usually assumed.
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A column about corruption perceptions, the gap between perceptions and reality, and the better ways of thinking about the development challenge of bribery.
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This week's column is on government contract publication. No, really, it is exciting and important. You know how Secret Santa gifts aren't usually as good as the ones you get from your loving spouse? That's in part because they are secret. The same thing applies to contracts. Sort of.
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What Resource Curse? is the first of my weekly columns ("The Optimist") for Foreign Policy. It suggests there isn't a resource curse. But that doesn't stop EITI and Todd Moss' cash transfer scheme being good ideas.