Does corruption contribute to the rise of the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from Uganda
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cogent Economics & Finance
Abstract
This paper investigates whether corruption has contributed to the rise
of the shadow economy in Uganda. Using autoregressive distributed lag bounds
testing approach and granger causality econometric methods we find a positive
relationship between corruption and the size of the shadow economy in both the
long- and short-run. Additionally, the causality results reveal a bidirectional
causal relationship between the shadow economy and corruption, and vice versa.
These findings suggest that, for the case of Uganda, an increase in corruption
contributes to the rise in the size of the shadow economy and vice versa, all else
equal. Given the complementary relationship between corruption and the size of
the shadow economy, addressing widespread informality in the country would
require; first, reforming the political system to tackle political corruption and go
after politicians who use their influence and power to circumvent institutions.
Second, carrying out institutional reforms to address political patronage and
influence peddling would go a long way into addressing systemic corruption
which in turn could help mitigate the spread of informal sector activities. Third,
strengthening the enforcement of existing laws to identify and punish culpable
public officials who use their offices for private gain would also address the level
of informality in the country.
Description
Keywords
Corruption, Informal sector, Tax evasion and avoidance, Country-level studies, Shadow economy
Citation
Esaku, S. (2021). Does corruption contribute to the rise of the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from Uganda. Cogent Economics & Finance, 9(1), 1932246.