天气能腐蚀美国吗?自然灾害救济与腐败的关系

Weathering Corruption

Journal of Law & Economics · 2008
被引 143
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

研究发现,联邦紧急事务管理局(FEMA)提供的自然灾害救济每增加人均100美元,该州的腐败率就会上升近102%,表明灾害救济带来的意外之财可能助长了腐败。

Abstract

Could bad weather be responsible for U.S. corruption? Natural disasters create resource windfalls in the states they strike by triggering federally provided natural‐disaster relief. By increasing the benefit of fraudulent appropriation and creating new opportunities for such theft, disaster‐relief windfalls may also increase corruption. We investigate this hypothesis by exploring the effect of disaster relief provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) on public corruption. The results support our hypothesis. Each additional $100 per capita in FEMA relief increases the average state’s corruption by nearly 102 percent. Our findings suggest notoriously corrupt regions of the United States, such as the Gulf Coast, are in part notoriously corrupt because natural disasters frequently strike them. They attract more disaster relief, which makes them more corrupt.

自然灾害联邦救灾公共腐败美国