Abstract

Do men and women perceive corruption differently? While evidence suggest that there is a strong link between gender and corruption, and that gender differences can at least partly be derived from men and women having different attitudes towards corruption, most studies to date focus on gender differences in perceptions of the scale or severity of the corruption in general, rather than its different forms. However, we argue that factors such as role socialization, social status and life experiences may make men and women perceive different kinds of corruption. Drawing on the distinction between ‘need’ and ‘greed’ corruption, we suggest that women are more likely than men to perceive that corruption is driven by need rather than greed. In particular, women may be more likely to be exposed to need corruption because of their greater care taking responsibilities both in the professional and private sphere, and, much in line with marginalization theory, have easier access to forms of corruption that are less dependent upon embeddedness in collusive networks. Using unique survey data, we show that women and men indeed differ in their perceptions of need vs. greed, and that women perceive more need corruption, while men perceive more greed corruption. This suggests that perceptions of different forms of corruption are indeed gendered and we discuss the implication of this for anti-corruption policy.

Highlights

  • In the past 20 years, studies have consistently shown a strong link between gender and corruption (Dollar, Fisman, & Gatti, 2001; Esarey & Schwindt-Bayer, 2018; Stensöta & Wängnerud, 2018; Swamy, Knack, Lee, & Azfar, 2001)

  • We employ unique questions capturing the need vs. greed forms of corruption, and we show that women perceive higher need corruption on average, while men tend to perceive a higher level of greed corruption

  • Model 1 shows that women on average tend to perceive higher levels of need corruption compared with men

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Summary

Introduction

In the past 20 years, studies have consistently shown a strong link between gender and corruption (Dollar, Fisman, & Gatti, 2001; Esarey & Schwindt-Bayer, 2018; Stensöta & Wängnerud, 2018; Swamy, Knack, Lee, & Azfar, 2001). Gender differences in socialization into caretaking roles and professions may explain differences in perceptions of the prevalence of need corruption, much in line with marginalization theories (for example, Barnes & Beaulieu, 2018; Bjarnegard, 2013; Goetz, 2007; Heath, Schwindt-Bayer, & Taylor-Robinson, 2005), women are less likely to be included in the collusive insider networks (which are often male-dominated) that facilitate greed based transactions, and will thereby be less likely to perceive this form of corruption as prevalent. This study builds on new data designed to measure the distinction between need and greed corruption and a large sample of respondents to investigate how the perceived nature of the corruption problem differs among men and women. Investigating public perceptions of different forms of corruption, and how it varies across societies and groups, is an important first step in understanding public demand for different types of anticorruption reforms

Gender and Corruption
Gender Differences in Perceptions of Different Forms of Corruption
Empirical Results
Discussion
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