000 00595nab|a22002177a|4500
999 _c63006
_d62998
001 63006
003 MX-TxCIM
005 20201218201220.0
008 201118s2020||||xxk|||p|op||||00||0|eng|d
022 _a0305-750X
024 8 _ahttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2020.105288
040 _aMX-TxCIM
041 _aeng
100 1 _aChatterjee, S.
_917545
245 1 0 _aIs there political elite capture in access to energy sources? Evidence from Indian households
260 _aUnited Kingdom :
_bElsevier,
_c2020.
500 _aPeer review
520 _aA perverse consequence of having decentralized local governments in developing countries is the misuse of public office for private gains by local leaders. This leads to a type of political elite capture where resources are diverted from the rest of the society towards the ones with political power. A large body of literature has explored such elite capture in terms of illegally apportioning benefits of public welfare programs but the possibility of such elite capture in access to energy sources, such as electricity and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), has not been studied. Using a nationally representative household survey data from India, we find corroborative evidence that households with political connections, or elite households, are more likely to have access to energy utilities compared to the non-elites. We use linear and non-linear regressions as well as propensity score matching methods to estimate these effects by controlling for a host of observed demographic characteristics as well as time-invariant regional characteristics. We do not find evidence of illegal access to electricity among elites. However, for access to LPG we find that the major mediating channel is the black market. We also find heterogeneity in elite capture effects such that rural areas are more prone to capture and caste-based social networks facilitate leveraging the political connections better. Our findings have important policy implications and provide a rationale for recent government policies where direct transfer of welfare scheme benefits are being made to intended recipients, to avoid capture by bureaucrats and elites in a thrust to eliminate the role of middlemen.
546 _aText in English
650 7 _aPolitics
_2AGROVOC
_95026
650 7 _aEnergy sources
_2AGROVOC
_94221
650 7 _aHouseholds
_2AGROVOC
_92743
651 7 _2AGROVOC
_93726
_aIndia
700 1 _917546
_aPal, D.
773 0 _gIn press
_dUnited Kingdom : Elsevier, 2020.
_tWorld Development
_x0305-750X
_w444788
942 _cJA
_n0
_2ddc