The
Daily Signal Mississippi
Named Most Corrupt State in the Nation
Steve
Wilson June
15, 2014
Mississippi
has finally got a top ranking among the states. Problem is, it’s an
achievement the state can do without.
A
study by researchers Cheol Liu from the City University of Hong Kong
and Indiana University’s John L. Mikesell found corruption in
Mississippi was tops among the states from 1976 through 2008. The
study sized up the effect of public corruption—measured by
convictions—on state spending. Data after 2008 for all of the areas
of their research was incomplete.
According
to the study, the 10 most-corrupt states could have reduced per
capita spending by an average of $1,308 if they had average
corruption levels. The study found states in the top 10 tend to focus
spending on “bribe-generating” spending and items directly
beneficial to public officials such as capital projects,
construction, highways, borrowing and total salaries and wages.
According
to Jon Moen, chairman of the University of Mississippi’s economics
department, corruption has clear consequences for the state with
wasteful spending, misallocation of resources and lost productivity.
“Clearly
corrupt officials will encourage activities or businesses that will
also provide them with the most benefits, whether they are outright
bribes or more legal benefits like campaign contributions,” Moen
said. “Rarely are these activities that are true public goods, like
elementary education, as they provide few direct monetary benefits
that can be appropriated by a politician or private interest.”
The
top 10 most corrupt states, according to the study, are:
Mississippi Louisiana Tennessee Illinois Pennsylvania Alabama Alaska South
Dakota Kentucky Florida
A
climate of corruption or even a perception of one can lead to serious
economic effects. The study cited several sources on how economic
activity is depressed in nations riddled with corruption. States are
no different.
With
economic activity depressed because of corruption, states such as
Mississippi are forced to use more subsidies and tax breaks. This
encourages companies to engage in more rent-seeking behavior—spending
wealth on political lobbying to increase one’s share of wealth
without creating wealth. This can build an even more entrenched
climate of corruption with companies constantly seeking to maintain
or even add to special privileges not afforded their competitors.
Mississippi’s
massive tax incentives to encourage companies such as Nissan, Toyota
and Yokohama Tire to relocate or, in the case of Cooper Tire, to
remain in the state, are some examples.
“Corruption
also results in less-secure property rights, and that makes smaller
businesses less likely to invest as much as they otherwise would or
even avoid the corrupt state altogether,” Moen said. “This
depresses the overall level of economic activity, but in ways that
are not obvious. A few well-connected businesses always will appear
successful, and the politician can point to them as evidence of his
ability to produce economic success. No one ever knows which
businesses decided not to start-up in a corrupt state.”
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