部分中欧国家企业对腐败的态度

IF 1.6 Q3 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Central European Public Administration Review Pub Date : 2023-11-30 DOI:10.17573/cepar.2023.2.02
Nenad Vretenar, Ana Marija Filipas, Martina Briš Alić
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:腐败被视为全世界普遍存在的问题,中欧国家也不例外。就腐败问题而言,这些国家仍然落后于领先的欧盟国家(如 2023 年全球治理指标所示)。由于腐败本身很难衡量,人们通常用对腐败的看法来代替。本文旨在分析部分中欧国家对腐败的态度,并就影响这些看法的因素得出结论。基于 "法律上的透明度和事实上的透明度之间的差异很重要 "这一假设,我们选择了捷克、匈牙利和波兰作为这两个透明度维度之间差异较小的国家,选择了克罗地亚、斯洛伐克和斯洛文尼亚作为这两个透明度维度之间差异较大的国家:利用欧洲晴雨表数据,我们采用逻辑回归分析了两组国家对腐败的态度,这两组国家在法律上和事实上的透明度方面存在差异。每组由三个中欧国家组成,用于创建一个模型,即模型 1 和模型 2,观察总数分别为 901 和 902。这两个模型都显示出足够的拟合指数,并能够进行预测,使我们能够得出结论。所有受访者均为企业代表,在其公司中负有决策责任,这确保了调查结果反映的是公司而非公众的看法:在所研究的国家中,对腐败的态度与对商业中的庇护和裙带关系的看法、对公共采购中的腐败的看法、对政商之间联系的看法以及对税率的态度有关。在法律上的透明度和事实上的透明度差别不大的国家组中,企业对腐败的态度还与对基础设施是否充足和行政程序是否复杂的看法有关。在这些差异较大的国家,对腐败的态度与对频繁修改法律所产生问题的看法、收债问题以及根据贿赂价值对贿赂严重程度的不同看法有关:本研究从商业角度更好地理解了影响中欧国家对腐败看法的因素。在此过程中,它引入了一种非常适合分析调查收集数据的方法,尤其是因为它允许因变量进行分类。此外,通过使用透明指数的数据来区分国家,本研究有可能促进对腐败与透明度之间关系的进一步理论和实证研究。最后,通过将公司感知到的问题与对腐败的总体感知联系起来,本文有助于确定所研究国家中最有可能存在小规模腐败的地区: 以往的研究发现,当事实上的透明度与法律上的透明度差距较大时,往往会出现腐败现象。本研究表明,这种差距的大小也可成功用于更好地了解影响人们对腐败的态度的因素。因此,本文采用法律透明度和事实透明度之间的差异作为分类标准,来分析影响人们对腐败看法的因素。通过这种分类方法,我们分别建立了两个具有较高预测能力的逻辑回归模型。
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Business’ Attitudes Towards Corruption in Selected Central European Countries
Purpose: Corruption is perceived as a widespread problem throughout the world, including in Central European countries. In terms of corruption, these countries still lag behind the leading EU countries (as indicated by the 2023 Worldwide Governance Indicators). As corruption itself is very difficult to measure, the perception of corruption is often used as a proxy. The aim of this paper is to analyse attitudes towards corruption in selected Central European countries and to draw conclusions on the factors influencing these perceptions. Based on the assumption that the difference between de jure and de facto transparency matters, we selected Czechia, Hungary, and Poland as countries with small differences between these two dimensions of transparency, and Croatia, Slovakia, and Slovenia as countries with large differences.Design/Methodology/Approach: Using Eurobarometer data, we applied logistic regression to analyse attitudes towards corruption in the two groups of countries distinguished by differences in de jure and de facto transparency. Each group, consisting of three Central European countries, was used to create a model, i.e., Model 1 and Model 2, with a total number of observations of 901 and 902, respectively. Both models displayed adequate fit indices and enabled predictions that allowed us to draw conclusions. All respondents were business representatives with decision-making responsibilities in their companies, ensuring that the results reflect company perceptions rather than those of the general public.Findings: Attitudes towards corruption in the countries studied are related to perceptions of patronage and nepotism in business, perceptions of corruption in public procurement, perceived links between politics and business, and attitudes towards tax rates. In the group where there is little difference between de jure and de facto transparency levels, business attitudes towards corruption are also associated with perceptions of adequacy of infrastructure and complexity of administrative procedures. In the countries where these differences are substantial, attitudes towards corruption are related to perceptions of problems arising from frequent changes in the law, problems with debt collection, and differences in views regarding the severity of bribery depending on the value of the bribe.Academic contribution to the field: This research provides a better understanding of the factors influencing the perception of corruption in Central European countries from a business perspective. In doing so, it introduces a methodology that is well-suited for the analysis of survey-collected data, especially since it allows the dependent variable to be categorical. Moreover, by using data from the Transparency Index to differentiate countries, the study has the potential to stimulate further theoretical and empirical research into the relationship between corruption and transparency. Lastly, by linking companies’ perceived problems to overall perceptions of corruption, this paper helps to identify the areas within the studied countries where pockets of corruption are most likely to exist.Originality/Value:  Previous research has found that corruption tends to occur when the gap between de facto and de jure transparency is larger. This research demonstrates that the size of this gap can also be successfully used to achieve a better understanding of the factors influencing attitudes towards corruption. Therefore, this paper employs the difference between de jure and de facto transparency as a categorisation criterion to analyse the factors influencing the perception of corruption. This categorisation approach enabled the development of two separate logistic regression models with high predictive power.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
28.60%
发文量
7
期刊最新文献
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