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Corruption continued

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It is estimated that the corrupt income is about 20 times official income ... year compared to 20 pounds for watchmen and gardeners on the government payroll. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Corruption continued


1
Corruption (continued)
2
Corruption in Ming and Qing (Ni and Van, 2005)
  • It is estimated that the corrupt income is about
    20 times official income in Ming and Qing.

3
Why government officials are so corrupted in Ming
and Qing?
  • Ming
  • Low salary of government officials
  • Concentrated power of office
  • Insufficient monitoring of government officials
  • Qing
  • Corruption was so widespread and the gain from
    corruption is so big that anti-corruption
    measures (e.g. raising nominal pay to officials)
    failed.

4
Low Salary for Officials
  • Tax revenue plummeted in Ming
  • Nominal wage decrease over time in Ming
  • Premium of high-rank is much smaller in Ming than
    in Sung
  • In 1012 (Sung), low-level civil servants get 96
    kuan and high-level ones got 4800 kuan.
  • In 1392 (Ming), low-level officers get 60 piculs
    of grain and high-rank ones get 1044 piculs.
  • In 1773, most English government officials are
    paid sevearl hundred pounds a year compared to 20
    pounds for watchmen and gardeners on the
    government payroll.

5
Concentrated Power of Office
  • Ample opportunities to collect rents in Ming and
    Qing
  • Government officials are not only administrators
    of public affairs but also tax collectors and
    judges of local courts.
  • In Sung
  • Numerous checks and balances regulated the
    government operations.
  • Officials were rotated often (3 or 4 years per
    post)
  • A sponsorship scheme

6
Insufficient Monitoring
  • Strict law with harsh punishment
  • Loose enforcement
  • Probability of being caught is very low
  • Probability of being caught may not be related to
    the degree of corruption.

7
Why Ming is so different from Sung?
  • Elimination of outside threats might have reduce
    the demand for checks on the power of officials,
    making wholesale corruption possible.
  • The founding Ming emperor came from humble roots.
    Upon gaining power, he reduced tax collection to
    grant relief to farmers and reduced the size of
    the central government.

8
Tenure Insecurity and Investment (Jacoby and
Rozelle, 2002)
  • Does land expropriation risk reduce investment of
    peasants on land?
  • Data
  • Household level data from Hebei and Liaoning
    provinces
  • Land tenure as a proxy for land expropriation
  • The use of organic fertilizer as a proxy for
    investment (investment of time).

9
Land Rights in China
  • Two types of land
  • Private plots (ziliu di) They are not really
    privately owned, but peasants land right on them
    are more secure.
  • Collectively controlled land (jiti di) These
    plots are more easily affected by the
    intervention of local governments.
  • On average private plots are held 12 years longer
    than collective plots.

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