This project will Conceptualize the degree of corruption and identify its root causes in order to (a) provide a theoretical foundation to a new approach of measurement that accounts for the degree of corruption, and (b) evaluate the effectiveness of current anti-corruption policies. It will develop new anti-corruption policy proposals, in particular exploiting known market failures. Meanwhile, this project will identify empirically how the anti-corruption campaign is isolated capital cities, elections, public good provision, and foreign direct investment. Finally, this project will translate these findings into technical and non-technical reports for dissemination to the general public, policy analysts and relevant organizations, and in particular to feed the public debate on the issue of corruption.
This project promotes results, which may possibly influence policy-making, and be followed-up by industry, civil society and the scientific community. This project will develop results tailored to the European context which, unlike in the existing empirical literature, is still some way from the Federal one where anti-corruption policy is debated. The findings generated by this project will be disseminated to academic as well as non-academic audiences to inform the public debate on the roots of the corruption phenomenon as well as ideas and recommendations of new anti-corruption strategies.