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WORLDWIDE GOVERNANCE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   090252


Measuring governance and corruption through the worldwide gover: critiques, responses, and ongoing scholarly discussion / Apaza, Carmen R   Journal Article
Apaza, Carmen R Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Since 1996 the World Bank Institute and the Research Department of the World Bank have been developing six governance indicators called the Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI). The six dimensions of governance include control of corruption, measuring perceptions on corruption. Based on the literature review as well as the data itself, this paper concludes that the conceptual and empirical issues on building governance indicators constitute an ongoing project.
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2
ID:   133654


Targeting, accountability and capture in development projects / Winters, Matthew S   Journal Article
Winters, Matthew S Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract If development projects are to be effective, a minimum requirement is that the funding reaches its intended destination. Yet the history of international development is replete with examples of this not happening. I argue that there will be fewer problems with corruption or other diversions of funding-which I jointly label capture-in more precisely targeted projects. More well-defined targeting results in superior accountability relationships because there is greater clarity of responsibility, clearer information about outcomes, and improved identifiability of stakeholders. I use an original cross-country, cross-project data set on the incidence of capture in World Bank-funded investment projects to test the theory. The data show a negative relationship between targeting and capture, and I demonstrate that this relationship is robust to a variety of specifications. In addition, I find that there is a higher baseline likelihood of project capture in countries perceived as more corrupt according to commonly used survey-based measures from Transparency International and the Worldwide Governance Indicators, cross-validating those measures and my own
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