2021
DOI: 10.1111/padm.12782
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Human resource management as a tool to control corruption: Evidence from Mexican municipal governments

Abstract: Principal‐agent models of corruption control that emphasize rules, incentives, and sanctions as prime antecedents of corruption often stop short when evaluating how these general principles translate into concrete Human Resource Management (HRM) policies. Following a call to develop research about how day‐to‐day public management operations change incentives to be corrupt, we use data of 5.22 million USD audited to 545 local Mexican governments over 3 years to test the correlation between the misappropriation … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 91 publications
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“…Both behaviors can cause the original fund allocations to be insufficient. In such a case, it is easy to produce a poor-quality, “jerry-built” project (Nieto-Morales & Ríos, 2022), which wastes investment resources and harms investment efficiency. To compensate for such project and achieve the same goals as expected, local governments may require a transfusion of government investment in project construction, further raising government investment costs and lowering investment efficiency.…”
Section: Hypothesis Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both behaviors can cause the original fund allocations to be insufficient. In such a case, it is easy to produce a poor-quality, “jerry-built” project (Nieto-Morales & Ríos, 2022), which wastes investment resources and harms investment efficiency. To compensate for such project and achieve the same goals as expected, local governments may require a transfusion of government investment in project construction, further raising government investment costs and lowering investment efficiency.…”
Section: Hypothesis Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%