Abstract

PurposeThe aim of the study is to examine the effect of public attitude on petty corruption.Design/methodology/approachThis is a survey study on customers of a licenses providing authority (N = 390) in Cairo, Egypt. The authors use Akers social learning theory of crime and deviance and take into consideration criticisms of it. The authors control for individual and organizational level determinants that are identified by scholars as influencing people's attitudes toward corruption and which could be known through the authority customers' experiences. Because the dependent variable is binary, whether a person paid a bribe during last transaction with this authority or not, the authors use binary logistic regression.FindingsThe findings indicate that people are more likely to engage in petty corruption when they see it as acceptable, have previous petty corruption experience and when they use a mediator. Also, of those who dealt with that civil service authority during and directly after the 25th of January Revolution (N = 161) 31% reported that they did not engage in petty corruption in comparison to previous years. They referred this to a change in attitude at the time.Originality/valueThe policy implications of the research are important. Social science theories could generate cultural and policy relevant solutions for petty corruption; however, they have not been taken full advantage of. Also, experience-based country-specific corruption survey studies are important input for an effective anti-corruption policy.

Highlights

  • Petty corruption is one of the types of bureaucratic corruption and a major problem in developing countries (Clarke, 2011)

  • The aim of this study is to identify the degree to which public attitude predicts petty corruption and to depict if a change in petty corruption level occurred due to the change in attitude during and directly after the 25th of January revolution in Egypt

  • The results show that when people do not define corruption as wrong, and when they perceive that corruption is widespread among their peers, they are more likely to engage in it

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Summary

Introduction

Petty corruption is one of the types of bureaucratic corruption and a major problem in developing countries (Clarke, 2011) It is that kind of corruption which is committed at the bottom of the bureaucracy pyramid by grass root and medium level bureaucrats and involves small and medium sums of money (Riley, 1999). The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons. org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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