Political Connections and Firms

Business and politicians' interaction is pervasive but has mostly been analyzed with a binary approach, i.e. either a firm is connected to a politician or not. Yet the network dimensions of such connections are ubiquitous. This paper uses use a unique data set for seven economies that documents politically exposed persons and their links to companies, political parties, and other individuals. The data set is used to identify networks of connections, including their scale and composition. The analysis finds that all country networks are integrated having a Big Island. They also tend to be marked by small-world properties of high clustering and short path length. Matching the data to firm-level information, the paper examines the association between being connected and firm-level attributes. The originality of the analysis is to identify how location in a network, including the extent of ties and centrality, is correlated with firm scale and performance. In a binary approach, such network characteristics are omitted and the scale and economic impact of politically connected business may be significantly mis/under-estimated. By comparing the results of the binary approach with the network approach, the paper also assesses the biases that result from ignoring network attributes.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Commander, Simon, Bussolo, Maurizio, Poupakis, Stavros
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018-05
Subjects:POLITICAL PARTIES, POLITICIANS, BUSINESS INTERESTS, POLITICAL NETWORKS, POLITICALLY EXPOSED PERSONS, GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS, PUBLIC PROCUREMENT, PUBLIC SPENDING, LOBBYING, GRAFT, BRIBERY, CORRUPTION, RENT SEEKING, PATRONAGE, CLIENTELISM,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/323581525356216199/Political-connections-and-firms-network-dimensions
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29834
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spelling dig-okr-10986298342024-08-09T07:54:36Z Political Connections and Firms Network Dimensions Commander, Simon Bussolo, Maurizio Poupakis, Stavros POLITICAL PARTIES POLITICIANS BUSINESS INTERESTS POLITICAL NETWORKS POLITICALLY EXPOSED PERSONS GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS PUBLIC PROCUREMENT PUBLIC SPENDING LOBBYING GRAFT BRIBERY CORRUPTION RENT SEEKING PATRONAGE CLIENTELISM Business and politicians' interaction is pervasive but has mostly been analyzed with a binary approach, i.e. either a firm is connected to a politician or not. Yet the network dimensions of such connections are ubiquitous. This paper uses use a unique data set for seven economies that documents politically exposed persons and their links to companies, political parties, and other individuals. The data set is used to identify networks of connections, including their scale and composition. The analysis finds that all country networks are integrated having a Big Island. They also tend to be marked by small-world properties of high clustering and short path length. Matching the data to firm-level information, the paper examines the association between being connected and firm-level attributes. The originality of the analysis is to identify how location in a network, including the extent of ties and centrality, is correlated with firm scale and performance. In a binary approach, such network characteristics are omitted and the scale and economic impact of politically connected business may be significantly mis/under-estimated. By comparing the results of the binary approach with the network approach, the paper also assesses the biases that result from ignoring network attributes. 2018-05-15T20:44:09Z 2018-05-15T20:44:09Z 2018-05 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/323581525356216199/Political-connections-and-firms-network-dimensions https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29834 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8428 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic POLITICAL PARTIES
POLITICIANS
BUSINESS INTERESTS
POLITICAL NETWORKS
POLITICALLY EXPOSED PERSONS
GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC SPENDING
LOBBYING
GRAFT
BRIBERY
CORRUPTION
RENT SEEKING
PATRONAGE
CLIENTELISM
POLITICAL PARTIES
POLITICIANS
BUSINESS INTERESTS
POLITICAL NETWORKS
POLITICALLY EXPOSED PERSONS
GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC SPENDING
LOBBYING
GRAFT
BRIBERY
CORRUPTION
RENT SEEKING
PATRONAGE
CLIENTELISM
spellingShingle POLITICAL PARTIES
POLITICIANS
BUSINESS INTERESTS
POLITICAL NETWORKS
POLITICALLY EXPOSED PERSONS
GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC SPENDING
LOBBYING
GRAFT
BRIBERY
CORRUPTION
RENT SEEKING
PATRONAGE
CLIENTELISM
POLITICAL PARTIES
POLITICIANS
BUSINESS INTERESTS
POLITICAL NETWORKS
POLITICALLY EXPOSED PERSONS
GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC SPENDING
LOBBYING
GRAFT
BRIBERY
CORRUPTION
RENT SEEKING
PATRONAGE
CLIENTELISM
Commander, Simon
Bussolo, Maurizio
Poupakis, Stavros
Political Connections and Firms
description Business and politicians' interaction is pervasive but has mostly been analyzed with a binary approach, i.e. either a firm is connected to a politician or not. Yet the network dimensions of such connections are ubiquitous. This paper uses use a unique data set for seven economies that documents politically exposed persons and their links to companies, political parties, and other individuals. The data set is used to identify networks of connections, including their scale and composition. The analysis finds that all country networks are integrated having a Big Island. They also tend to be marked by small-world properties of high clustering and short path length. Matching the data to firm-level information, the paper examines the association between being connected and firm-level attributes. The originality of the analysis is to identify how location in a network, including the extent of ties and centrality, is correlated with firm scale and performance. In a binary approach, such network characteristics are omitted and the scale and economic impact of politically connected business may be significantly mis/under-estimated. By comparing the results of the binary approach with the network approach, the paper also assesses the biases that result from ignoring network attributes.
format Working Paper
topic_facet POLITICAL PARTIES
POLITICIANS
BUSINESS INTERESTS
POLITICAL NETWORKS
POLITICALLY EXPOSED PERSONS
GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC SPENDING
LOBBYING
GRAFT
BRIBERY
CORRUPTION
RENT SEEKING
PATRONAGE
CLIENTELISM
author Commander, Simon
Bussolo, Maurizio
Poupakis, Stavros
author_facet Commander, Simon
Bussolo, Maurizio
Poupakis, Stavros
author_sort Commander, Simon
title Political Connections and Firms
title_short Political Connections and Firms
title_full Political Connections and Firms
title_fullStr Political Connections and Firms
title_full_unstemmed Political Connections and Firms
title_sort political connections and firms
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018-05
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/323581525356216199/Political-connections-and-firms-network-dimensions
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29834
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