Are Financial Development
and Corruption Control
Substitutes in Promoting Growth?
Working Paper No. 07-W09
Christian Ahlin and Jiaren Pang
ABSTRACT [article]
While financial development and corruption control have been studied
extensively, their interaction has not. We develop a simple model in which
low corruption and financial development both facilitate the undertaking of
productive projects, but act as substitutes in doing so. The
substitutability arises because corruption raises the need for liquidity and
thus makes financial improvements more potent; conversely, financial
underdevelopment makes increased corruption more onerous and thus raises the
gains from reducing it. We test this substitutability by predicting growth,
of countries and industries, using measures of financial development, lack
of corruption, and a key interaction term. Both approaches point to positive
effects from improving either factor, as well as to a substitutability
between them. The growth gain associated with moving from the 25th to the
75th percentile in one factor is 0.63-1.68 percentage points higher if the
second factor is at the 25th percentile rather than the 75th. The results
show robustness to different measures of corruption and financial
development and do not appear to be driven by outliers, omitted variables,
or other theories of growth and convergence.
Keywords and Phrases: Financial development, growth, complementarity, corruption
JEL Classification Numbers: O16, O17, O40, O43