Abstract
In this chapter we argue that soft transport infrastructure can increase the cost of trade. We illustrate our argument with the example of port bureaucracies in Southern Africa. Since these bureaucracies hold a discretionary monopoly over the provision of a non-substitutable essential public service, they are vulnerable to corruption. We find that the magnitude and the type of corruption that emerges at ports are correlated with the extent to which rules, regulations and the organizational features of bureaucracies give public officials the bargaining rights and the opportunities to extort bribe payments from shippers. © De Boeck Université.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Macchi, P., & Sequeira, S. (2009). L’infrastructure de transport « immatérielle » des ports de Maputo et Durban. Afrique Contemporaine, 230(2), 69–82. https://doi.org/10.3917/afco.230.0069
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