We develop an agency model of organized crime accounting for the main trade-offs involved in the introduction of an accomplice-witness program. We characterize the optimal policy and identify its main determinants in a framework where public officials can be dishonest. Our predictions are tested by using data for Italy before and after the introduction of the 1991 accomplice-witness program. As predicted by the model and the earlier antitrust literature, the program appears to have strengthened deterrence and enhanced prosecution. Moreover, consistent with a novel prediction of our theory, the evidence suggests that the program efficacy is affected by the judicial system efficiency.
Accomplice Witnesses and Organized Crime: Theory and Evidence from Italy / Acconcia, Antonio; Immordino, Giovanni; Salvatore, Piccolo; Patrick, Rey. - In: SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS. - ISSN 0347-0520. - 116:4(2014), pp. 1116-1159. [10.1111/sjoe.12080]
Accomplice Witnesses and Organized Crime: Theory and Evidence from Italy
ACCONCIA, ANTONIO;IMMORDINO, GIOVANNI;
2014
Abstract
We develop an agency model of organized crime accounting for the main trade-offs involved in the introduction of an accomplice-witness program. We characterize the optimal policy and identify its main determinants in a framework where public officials can be dishonest. Our predictions are tested by using data for Italy before and after the introduction of the 1991 accomplice-witness program. As predicted by the model and the earlier antitrust literature, the program appears to have strengthened deterrence and enhanced prosecution. Moreover, consistent with a novel prediction of our theory, the evidence suggests that the program efficacy is affected by the judicial system efficiency.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.