Committing to Civil Service Reform : The Performance of Pre-Shipment Inspection under Different Institutional Regimes

If the only solution tried for customs corruption and evasion in a developing country is to outsource certain customs functions to a pre-shipment inspection (PSI) company, PSI will prove more of a fiscal burden than a panacea. PSI works best in cou...

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Main Author: Johnson, Noel
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/04/2873480/committing-civil-service-reform-performance-pre-shipment-inspection-under-different-institutional-regimes
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19669
id okr-10986-19669
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-196692021-04-23T14:03:43Z Committing to Civil Service Reform : The Performance of Pre-Shipment Inspection under Different Institutional Regimes Johnson, Noel CIVIL SERVICE CIVIL SERVICE REFORM CONSIGNMENTS CUSTOMS CUSTOMS AGENCIES CUSTOMS AUTHORITIES CUSTOMS DUTIES CUSTOMS OFFICERS CUSTOMS OFFICIALS DESTINATION COUNTRY ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE EVASION EXCISE TAXES IMPORTED GOODS IMPORTING COUNTRY INDUSTRIAL SECTOR OPEN ECONOMY REVENUE FRAUD SHIPMENT TAX TAX RATES TAX REVENUE TAX REVENUES TAX SYSTEM TAXATION TRANSACTION COSTS If the only solution tried for customs corruption and evasion in a developing country is to outsource certain customs functions to a pre-shipment inspection (PSI) company, PSI will prove more of a fiscal burden than a panacea. PSI works best in countries where the customs service already performs fairly well-by reducing the costs of catching evaders. Typically a developing country's customs service brings in a large share of its revenues and accounts for an even larger share of its corruption. One prescription popular among development agencies for reducing corruption and customs evasion by importers has been to outsource certain customs functions to pre-shipment inspection (PSI) companies. More than 35 countries employ PSI as a second-best solution to corruption in customs collection. But whether PSI companies are an effective alternative to comprehensive civil service reform has been widely questioned. The success of PSI contracts depends on the institutional environment-the formal and informal rules of enforcement that affect different agents' incentives-but the reasons for PSI's success or failure in different institutional settings have not been well understood. Johnson presents a simple model highlighting the principal-agent problems in a typical PSI contract. Based on his conclusions, he suggests that PSI should be thought of less as a second-best alternative to customs reform (in countries where the customs service performs poorly) than as a cost-effective complement to reforms in "intermediate" cases (countries where the customs service already performs fairly well). PSI could help in these intermediate cases by reducing the costs of catching evaders. This would make it easier for the ministry of finance to maintain separate reforms to eliminate corruption between customs and importers. In countries where the customs service is powerful-is highly independent and controls the country's borders-and where the government does not have the institutional ability to put through the complementary reforms essential for using PSI successfully, introducing a PSI contract will add to the burdens of public finance rather than provide the hoped-for panacea. 2014-08-26T15:16:01Z 2014-08-26T15:16:01Z 2001-04 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/04/2873480/committing-civil-service-reform-performance-pre-shipment-inspection-under-different-institutional-regimes http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19669 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2594 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic CIVIL SERVICE
CIVIL SERVICE REFORM
CONSIGNMENTS
CUSTOMS
CUSTOMS AGENCIES
CUSTOMS AUTHORITIES
CUSTOMS DUTIES
CUSTOMS OFFICERS
CUSTOMS OFFICIALS
DESTINATION COUNTRY
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
EVASION
EXCISE TAXES
IMPORTED GOODS
IMPORTING COUNTRY
INDUSTRIAL SECTOR
OPEN ECONOMY
REVENUE FRAUD
SHIPMENT
TAX
TAX RATES
TAX REVENUE
TAX REVENUES
TAX SYSTEM
TAXATION
TRANSACTION COSTS
spellingShingle CIVIL SERVICE
CIVIL SERVICE REFORM
CONSIGNMENTS
CUSTOMS
CUSTOMS AGENCIES
CUSTOMS AUTHORITIES
CUSTOMS DUTIES
CUSTOMS OFFICERS
CUSTOMS OFFICIALS
DESTINATION COUNTRY
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
EVASION
EXCISE TAXES
IMPORTED GOODS
IMPORTING COUNTRY
INDUSTRIAL SECTOR
OPEN ECONOMY
REVENUE FRAUD
SHIPMENT
TAX
TAX RATES
TAX REVENUE
TAX REVENUES
TAX SYSTEM
TAXATION
TRANSACTION COSTS
Johnson, Noel
Committing to Civil Service Reform : The Performance of Pre-Shipment Inspection under Different Institutional Regimes
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2594
description If the only solution tried for customs corruption and evasion in a developing country is to outsource certain customs functions to a pre-shipment inspection (PSI) company, PSI will prove more of a fiscal burden than a panacea. PSI works best in countries where the customs service already performs fairly well-by reducing the costs of catching evaders. Typically a developing country's customs service brings in a large share of its revenues and accounts for an even larger share of its corruption. One prescription popular among development agencies for reducing corruption and customs evasion by importers has been to outsource certain customs functions to pre-shipment inspection (PSI) companies. More than 35 countries employ PSI as a second-best solution to corruption in customs collection. But whether PSI companies are an effective alternative to comprehensive civil service reform has been widely questioned. The success of PSI contracts depends on the institutional environment-the formal and informal rules of enforcement that affect different agents' incentives-but the reasons for PSI's success or failure in different institutional settings have not been well understood. Johnson presents a simple model highlighting the principal-agent problems in a typical PSI contract. Based on his conclusions, he suggests that PSI should be thought of less as a second-best alternative to customs reform (in countries where the customs service performs poorly) than as a cost-effective complement to reforms in "intermediate" cases (countries where the customs service already performs fairly well). PSI could help in these intermediate cases by reducing the costs of catching evaders. This would make it easier for the ministry of finance to maintain separate reforms to eliminate corruption between customs and importers. In countries where the customs service is powerful-is highly independent and controls the country's borders-and where the government does not have the institutional ability to put through the complementary reforms essential for using PSI successfully, introducing a PSI contract will add to the burdens of public finance rather than provide the hoped-for panacea.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Johnson, Noel
author_facet Johnson, Noel
author_sort Johnson, Noel
title Committing to Civil Service Reform : The Performance of Pre-Shipment Inspection under Different Institutional Regimes
title_short Committing to Civil Service Reform : The Performance of Pre-Shipment Inspection under Different Institutional Regimes
title_full Committing to Civil Service Reform : The Performance of Pre-Shipment Inspection under Different Institutional Regimes
title_fullStr Committing to Civil Service Reform : The Performance of Pre-Shipment Inspection under Different Institutional Regimes
title_full_unstemmed Committing to Civil Service Reform : The Performance of Pre-Shipment Inspection under Different Institutional Regimes
title_sort committing to civil service reform : the performance of pre-shipment inspection under different institutional regimes
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/04/2873480/committing-civil-service-reform-performance-pre-shipment-inspection-under-different-institutional-regimes
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19669
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