Where Have All the Non-Corrupt Civil Servants Gone?
Corruption and Trust in Public Administration
in European Countries
			
	
 
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				University of Hradec Králové
				 
			 
										
				
				
		
		 
			
			
		
		
		
		
		
			
			 
			Publication date: 2020-09-29
			 
		 			
		 
	
							
									
		
	 
		
 
 
Polish Sociological Review 2020;211(3):345-362
		
 
 
KEYWORDS
ABSTRACT
This article deals with corruption and trust in the public administration of nine countries of the former
Western bloc and neutral states, which underwent different institutional development compared to post-communist
countries, which were susceptible to corruption due to a strongly centralized public administration with complex
decision-making processes and the considerable power of officials. Despite the different institutional development
of the public administration in Western countries, these countries are not always perceived by the public as trustworthy
and not corrupt. This article reveals that in countries like Switzerland, Norway, and Finland, civil servants
are perceived by the public as rather trustworthy and not corrupt, whereas in countries like Spain and France, the
opposite is true. Using statistical methods, this article also demonstrates that the perception of the involvement
of civil servants in corruption and their unequal treatment of citizens diminishes their trust in the eyes of the
public. The experience of respondents with bribery on the part of civil servants reduces confidence in the public
administration in only two states. In the other seven, this variable was statistically insignificant.
		
	
		
    
    FUNDING
    
    	This work was supported by the Philosophical faculty of the University of Hradec Králové, Rokitanského 62, 500 03, Hradec Králové, Czech Republic (Specific research grant “Corruption in relation to political participation and trust”).