end, they were asked for bribes on ten occasions and paid them twice to prevent
the project from stalling completely.) The team worked six hours a day for forty-
two weeks in order to get eleven different
permits from seven different
government bodies. Their efforts, not including the time, cost $1,231, or 31
times the monthly minimum wage in Peru—all to open a one-person shop.
11
Chapter 4 outlined all the reasons government should stick to the basics.
Harvard economist Robert Barro’s classic study of economic growth in roughly
one hundred countries over three decades found that government consumption—
total government spending excluding education and defense—was
negatively
correlated with per capita GDP growth. He concluded that such spending (and
the required taxation) is not likely to increase productivity and will therefore do
more harm than good. The Asian tigers, the all-star team in the economic
development league, made their economic ascent
with government spending in
the range of 20 percent of GDP. Elsewhere in the world, high tax rates that are
applied unevenly distort the economy and provide opportunities for graft and
corruption. Many poor governments might actually
collect more revenue if they
implemented taxes that were low, simple, and easy to collect.
The Internet has a huge potential to improve transparency everywhere, but
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