Mexicans prefer bribes to obeying the law
According to a study mentioned in a short news article, Mexicans prefer to “arreglar” or fix things rather than follow the law. Thirty-nine percent prefer extra-legal resolutions to problems.
This attitude is rational. When you can pay a US$5 bribe in 5 minutes with no chance of penalties for the bribe to avoid paying a $25 fine that will take 4 hours, you choose the bribe. Indeed, the best advice to get out of paying a bribe for a traffic violation is often to demand to go pay the fine. The argument is that the officer will not want to lose valuable bribe-time by waiting around the station for you to pay. It’s a perfect example of poor institutional design leading individuals to find work-arounds. Explaining how such poor institutions lead to economic inefficiency and underdevelopment is, in part, how Douglass North earned a Nobel prize. And it makes sense.
Troubling, but not surprising, is the attitude Mexicans have about politicians.
38% agreed with the statement, “Un polÃtico pobre es un pobre polÃtico” [A politician’s that’s poor is a poor politician].
24% believed that honesty was the key to success in politics, compared to 43% who believed politicians had to be corrupt or very corrupt to succeed.
Such little trust in politicians and government is bound to have all sorts of negative effects on long-term democracy.
Does the story say anything about the study’s methodology? My Spanish is a little rusty.
While I’m at it: Are you going to APSA this year?
No, the story does not. And I didn’t look for the original online b/c it’s probably not posted. No, I don’t plan to go to APSA this year. There’s a conference the next week at Northwestern that looks more interesting to me.
But I’ll be at the midwest in April probably.
Ok. Did a quick search. The PI does have a homepage of sorts, but study is not listed or discussed. Typical.