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Spillover effects of corruption: evidence from China's anti-corruption campaign

Daniel Sungyeon Kim (Chung-Ang University, Seoul, South Korea)
Lizhe Luo (China International Capital Corporation Limited, Beijing, China)
Domenico Tarzia (Peking University HSBC Business School, Shenzhen, China)
Giovanni Vittorino (Bank of Italy, Rome, Italy)
Andros Gregoriou (University of Brighton, Brighton, UK)

Journal of Economic Studies

ISSN: 0144-3585

Article publication date: 31 May 2022

Issue publication date: 1 May 2023

308

Abstract

Purpose

The authors study the effectiveness of the anti-corruption campaign in all of mainland China's provinces in terms of risk and volatility spillovers.

Design/methodology/approach

A nonlinear model describes interdependencies and determines how shocks and uncertainty spillovers from the first suspects to the rest of the country are dynamically transmitted.

Findings

The authors find that both idiosyncratic and systematic risk increase after the first investigation, suggesting that investors do react to the political shocks induced by the new policy. However, even if the scope of the inquiry expands, as the current policy is almost certain to be maintained, investors do not need to update their beliefs, stock news about their political costs does not matter and shocks cease to spread.

Originality/value

In this paper, the authors contribute to the literature by examining the financial effects of China's anti-corruption campaign and determining whether such a large-scale campaign affects risk. Qian and Wen (2015) and Ke et al. (2016) show that the anticorruption campaign has a negative impact on the consumption of luxury goods. Agarwal et al. (2020) provide evidence that government officials' access to credit decreases following the anti-corruption campaign. According to Zhang (2018), firms are less prone to commit fraud after the anti-corruption campaign. However, Griffin et al. (2018) find little evidence that the anti-corruption campaign reduces corporate corruption. Kim et al. (2018) assess market reaction during the investigation and discover that the anti-corruption examination has a significant positive influence on Chinese financial markets. The authors intend to fill the gap in the literature concerning the campaign's impact on risk and volatility spillovers across the country during the first stage of the campaign.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Declaration of interest: None

The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the China International Capital Corporation Limited, Bank of Italy or of the Eurosystem. All remaining errors are our own.

Citation

Kim, D.S., Luo, L., Tarzia, D., Vittorino, G. and Gregoriou, A. (2023), "Spillover effects of corruption: evidence from China's anti-corruption campaign", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 50 No. 4, pp. 752-772. https://doi.org/10.1108/JES-01-2022-0038

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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