Corruption in cyclone preparedness and relief efforts in coastal Bangladesh: Lessons for climate adaptation?

Author(s)
Mahmud, T. & Prowse, M.
Publication language
English
Pages
10pp
Date published
01 Oct 2012
Publisher
World Development 22 (4)
Type
Articles
Keywords
Disaster preparedness, resilience and risk reduction, Disaster preparedness, Disasters, Cyclone
Countries
Bangladesh

This article seeks to draw possible lessons for adaptation programmes in Bangladesh by examining whether cyclone preparedness and relief interventions are subject to corrupt practices. Based on a random sample survey of 278 households, three focus-group discussions and seven key-informant interviews, the article investigates the nature and extent of corruption in pre- and post-disaster interventions in Khulna before and after Cyclone Aila in May 2009. Ninety nine percent of households reported losses from corrupt practices. Post-disaster interventions (such as food aid and public works schemes) suffered from greater levels, and worse types, of corruption than pre-disaster interventions (such as cyclone warning systems and disaster-preparedness training). Using an asset index created using principal component analysis, the article assesses how corruption affected wealth quartiles. Ultra-poor households were affected more by corruption in pre-disaster interventions, the wealthiest quartile more in certain post-disaster interventions, in particular public works and non-governmental interventions. These findings may hold lessons for attempts to increase resilience as current adaptation measures mirror some cyclone preparedness and relief efforts.