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The Economics of Repeated Extortion

Choi, Jay Pil; Thum, Marcel

This paper provides a simple model of repeated extortion. In particular, we ask whether corrupt government officials' ex post opportunism to demand more once entrepreneurs have made sunk investments entails further distortion in resource allocations. We show that the inability of government officials to commit to future demands does not distort entry decisions any further if technology is not a choice variable for the entrepreneurs. The government official can properly discount the initial demand in order to induce the appropriate amount of entry. If, however, the choice of technology is left to the entrepreneurs, the dynamic path of demand schedules will induce entrepreneurs to pursue a "fly-by-night" strategy by adopting a technology with an inefficiently low sunk cost component. In this case, we show that the unique equilibrium is characterized by a mixed strategy of the government official on future demand. Our model thus explains why arbitrariness is such an inseparable feature of corruption. We also investigate implications of the stability of the corrupt regime for the dynamic extortion and discuss how our framework can be applied to other investment contexts involving the risk of expropriation.

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Academic Units
Economics
Publisher
Department of Economics, Columbia University
Series
Department of Economics Discussion Papers, 9899-03
Published Here
March 7, 2011

Notes

September 1998