“…Corruption of public officials influences the fiscal and financial conditions of governments in different ways. Corruption has adverse effects at the macroeconomic level, such as dropping investment and economic growth (Mauro, 1995, 1996), instigating inflation (Al‐Marhubi, 2000), provoking poor productivity (Lambsdorff, 2003), aggravating income inequality and poverty (Gupta et al, 1998; Justesen & Bjornskov, 2014), and promoting shadow economies (Goel & Saunoris, 2016). At the level of public budgeting and financial management, corruption presents several negative effects by reducing tax revenues (Khlif et al, 2016), lowering the quality of public infrastructure and services (Shleifer & Vishny, 1993), altering the level and composition of government spending (Liu & Mikesell, 2014), distorting the level and composition of public spending on education, health, and social services (Justesen & Bjornskov, 2014), and increasing public debt (Kim et al, 2017; Liu et al, 2017).…”