Chapter 1: | Introduction |
According to Kaufmann, governance matters for a country’s competitiveness and for income distribution.28 He adds that, in the case of corruption, research suggests that it is equivalent to a major tax on foreign investors.29 In many developing countries, it is argued, corruption represents a ‘regressive tax’ on the household sector as well: lower-income families pay a disproportionate share of their incomes in bribes to have access to public services (compared with higher-income groups) and often end up with less access to such services because of corruption.30 Kaufmann observes further that a rough estimate of the extent of annual worldwide transactions that are tainted by corruption puts it close to $1 trillion.31 He posits that aid-funded projects tend to fail in corrupt settings.32 Therefore, ‘corruption undermines fledgling democracies. And governance is not the only thing that matters for development. Macroeconomic, trade, and sectoral policies are also important. But when governance is poor, policymaking in other areas is also compromised.’33 And it is a myth to argue the following: