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Why women are less likely to be corrupt than men

Source: Economist

IN JANUARY TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL, an NGO, released its annual report on corruption around the world. Measured by its average index, corruption has not improved for a decade. In many poor countries it is getting worse. The authors’ recommendations include strengthening anti-corruption agencies, cracking down on financial crime and making public spending more transparent. But some countries have tried a different method: hiring more women.

The idea gained credence after researchers from the World Bank published a study in 2001 that looked at 100 countries. In those with a greater proportion of female legislators, officials were less likely to demand bribes. New research by a group of academics, including Francesco Decarolis of Bocconi University, in Milan, came to a similar conclusion.

It found that in China between 1979 and 2014 senior female bureaucrats were 81% less likely to have been arrested for corruption than their male colleagues. And in Italy between 2000 and 2016 female officials were 22% less likely than male ones to be investigated for corruption.

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