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Working Paper No. 1323

Does Local Government Corruption Inhibit Entrepreneurship?

Working Paper
Reference
Wittberg, Emanuel, Gissur Ó Erlingsson and Karl Wennberg (2020). “Does Local Government Corruption Inhibit Entrepreneurship?”. IFN Working Paper No. 1323. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).

Authors
Emanuel Wittberg, Gissur Ó Erlingsson, Karl Wennberg

The dominant ‘sand in the wheels’-view holds that entrepreneurship is strongly inhibited by corruption. Challenging this, the ‘grease the wheels’-view maintains that corruption might increase entrepreneurship in highly regulated economies. We extend the basic predictions of these theories by examining entrepreneurs’ start-up decisions, as well as their location choices, in a seemingly low-corruption environment: Swedish municipalities. Combining a validated index of corruption perceptions in local government with population data on new entrepreneurs, nested logit models reveal that even in a low-corruption setting such as Sweden, perceptions of corruption can deter latent entrepreneurs. We also find that a minority of entrepreneurs relocate from their home municipalities to establish their start-ups elsewhere. Surprisingly and contrary to expectations, these relocating entrepreneurs often relocate from relatively low-corruption municipalities to others that are more corrupt. Implications for future research and public policy are discussed.