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Fields Changed

Registration

Field Before After
Trial Status in_development completed
Trial End Date November 30, 2015 April 27, 2016
Last Published October 19, 2015 07:55 AM April 10, 2018 02:52 PM
Study Withdrawn No
Intervention Completion Date April 27, 2016
Data Collection Complete Yes
Final Sample Size: Number of Clusters (Unit of Randomization) 171 prosecution cases
Was attrition correlated with treatment status? Yes
Final Sample Size: Total Number of Observations 255 defendant
Final Sample Size (or Number of Clusters) by Treatment Arms 105 controls, 150 treatment
Is there a restricted access data set available on request? No
Program Files No
Data Collection Completion Date April 27, 2016
Is data available for public use? No
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Papers

Field Before After
Paper Abstract Leniency policies and asymmetric punishment are regarded as potentially powerful anti- corruption tools, also in the light of their success in busting price-fixing cartels. It has been argued, however, that the introduction of these policies in China in 1997 has not helped fighting corruption. Following up on this view, the Central Committee of the Chinese Com- munist Party passed, in November 2015, a reform introducing heavier penalties, but also restrictions to leniency. Properly designing and correctly evaluating these policies is diffi- cult. Corruption is only observed if detected, and an increase in convictions is consistent with both reduced deterrence or improved detection. We map the evolution of the Chinese anti-corruption legislation, collect data on corruption cases for the period 1986-2010, and apply a new method to identify deterrence effects from changes in detected cases devel- oped for cartels by Miller (2009). We document a large and stable fall in corruption cases starting immediately after the 1997 reform, consistent with a negative effect of the reform on corruption detection, but under specific assumptions also with increased deterrence. To resolve this ambiguity, we collect and analyze a random sample of case files from corruption trials. Results point to a negative effect of the 1997 reform, linked to the increased leniency also for bribe-takers cooperating after being denounced. This likely enhanced their ability to retaliate against reporting bribe-givers – chilling detection through whistleblowing – as predicted by theories on how these programs should (not) be designed.
Paper Citation Berlin, Maria, Bei Qin, and Giancarlo Spagnolo. "Leniency, asymmetric punishment and corruption: Evidence from China." (2017).
Paper URL https://swopec.hhs.se/hasite/papers/hasite0034.pdf
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