“…See, for example, Leff (1964), Huntington (1968), Lui (1985), Beck and Maher (1986), Lien (1986), Aidt, et al (2005). According to this view, in economies where the economic dominance of government-run monopolies along with bureaucratic rigidities leads to inefficient outcomes (e.g., to constant shortages), corruption can serve as a means for achieving a higher degree of economic efficiency by "greasing the wheels" of government and overcoming cumbersome government bureaucratic regulations (red tape) by giving the bureaucrats the incentive to make their work more efficient despite the institutional and bureaucratic rigidities under which they operate (Blackburn, et al 2006). 29 In Georgia's centrally planned command economy, the government officials and bureaucrats were the ones that made the decisions of what will be produced, how much will be produced, and for whom will be produced.…”