Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/29138
Título: Corruption kills : global evidence from natural disasters
Autor: Cevik, Serhan
Jalles, João Tovar
Palavras-chave: Corruption
institutions
natural disasters
fatalities
Data: Out-2023
Editora: ISEG - REM - Research in Economics and Mathematics
Citação: Cevik, Serhan e João Tovar Jalles (2023). "Corruption kills : global evidence from natural disasters". REM Working paper series, nº 0295/2023
Relatório da Série N.º: REM Working paper series;nº 0295/2023
Resumo: Natural disasters are inevitable, but humanitarian and economic losses are determined largely by policy preferences and institutional underpinnings that shape the quality of public infrastructure (including emergency responses and healthcare services) and govern business practices and the adherence to building codes. This paper investigates whether corruption increases the loss of human lives caused by natural disasters, using a broad panel of 135 countries during the period 1980–2020. The empirical analysis provides convincing evidence that corruption increases the number of disaster-related deaths, after controlling for economic, demographic, healthcare and institutional factors. That is, the higher the level of corruption in a given country, the greater the number of fatalities as a share of population due to natural disasters. Our results show that the devastating effect of corruption on loss of human lives caused by natural disasters is significantly greater in developing countries, which are even more susceptible to nonlinear effects of corruption.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/29138
ISSN: 2184-108X
Versão do Editor: https://rem.rc.iseg.ulisboa.pt/wps/pdf/REM_WP_0295_2023.pdf
Aparece nas colecções:REM - REM Working Papers Series

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