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Research Paper | Communication or Media Studies | India | Volume 6 Issue 3, March 2017 | Popularity: 7.3 / 10
Effects of Information Communication and Technology (ICT) on Corruption and Social Capital
Dr. Dilip Kumar, Dr. Gaurav Yadav, Sweta Gaur Sharma
Abstract: This research paper examines the argument that Information Communication and Technology (ICT) and social capital serve as major factors to reduce corruption. ICT has the potential to reduce unnecessary human intervention in government work processes, thus reducing the need to monitor corrupt behavior. Furthermore, citizens living in a society with a high level of social capital are more likely to become actively involved in the political decision-making process, increasing the likelihood that public employees' corrupt behaviors will be exposed to the densely connected public. We also examined the relationship between social capital and ICT. Our statistical analysis, which used panels of datasets obtained from various sources, revealed that (1) ICT is an effective tool for reducing corruption, (2) social capital also has positive effects on anti-corruption, but various dimensions of social capital may have different impacts, and (3) the relationship between social capital and ICT is inconclusive. Points for practitioners The theoretical model and empirical results of this research paper shed light on the potential impacts of ICT on corruption, thereby providing practitioners with the opportunity to consider ICT as a useful and practical policy tool for reducing corruption in addition to traditional methods, i. e. administrative reform and law enforcement. Further, although our research findings on the relationship between ICT and social capital were inconclusive, social capital was found to have anticorruption effects independent of ICT, which implies that policies designed to foster trust networks in a society can contribute to the reduction of corruption.
Keywords: ICT, Anticorruption, Human Intervention, Policies
Edition: Volume 6 Issue 3, March 2017
Pages: 465 - 472
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