Bribery remains prevalent across African countries, yet little is known about how fear of retaliation for reporting corruption interacts with national institutional contexts to shape bribery behaviour. Using Round 9 Afrobarometer data from 42,655 respondents across 39 African states, this study examines how perceptions of reporting risk combine with macro-level conditions of state capture and symbolic law to influence the likelihood of paying bribes. Hierarchical logistic regression results show that individuals who fear retaliation are significantly more likely to engage in bribery, but this relationship is conditioned by institutional strength. High levels of state capture and weak rule-of-law systems intensify the effect of retaliation risk, whereas judicial independence mitigates it. Aspects of symbolic law—judicial accountability, access to justice, and enforcement—further shape how fear translates into corrupt exchanges. The findings demonstrate that reducing bribery requires credible, protective, and functional institutions, not simply increased anti-corruption awareness. The study advances corruption research by integrating behavioural risk perceptions with multi-dimensional measures of institutional weakness, offering a cross-national explanation for when fear becomes behaviourally consequential.
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Joseph Yaw Asomah
Eugene Emeka Dim
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Asomah et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a67eb2f353c071a6f0a178 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/laws15020015