Source: Getty
commentary

Quid Pro Quo: Builders, Politicians, and Election Finance in India

A new measure of construction activity reveals evidence that builders in India use their assets to help politicians circumvent election finance laws.

by Milan Vaishnav and Devesh Kapur
published by
Center for Global Development
 on March 29, 2013

Source: Center for Global Development

Where elections are costly but accountability mechanisms are weak, politicians often turn to private firms for illicit election finance. Where firms are highly regulated, politicians can exchange policy discretion or regulatory forbearance for bribes and monetary transfers from firms. Due to its regulatory intensity, we focus on the role of the construction sector. Specifically, we argue that builders will experience a short-term liquidity crunch as elections approach because of their need to re-route funds to politicians as a form of indirect election finance. We use variation in the demand for cement to investigate the presence of an electoral cycle in building activity in India consistent with this logic. Using a novel monthly-level dataset, we demonstrate that cement consumption does exhibit a political business cycle consistent with our hypothesis.  Additional tests provide confidence in the robustness and interpretation of our findings.

This full text of this article is available at the Center for Global Development.

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