Can Persistent Corruption Reshape How Citizens Think, Behave, and Participate in Society?
Corruption is commonly understood as a moral failure, an abuse of public office, or an economic obstacle to development. Yet corruption is also an environment—one that shapes incentives, expectations, and everyday decision-making. When corruption becomes persistent rather than episodic, it can influence not only how institutions function but also how citizens see authority, evaluate risk, and participate in public life. My inquiry does not ask whether corruption lowers innate intelligence. Current evidence does not support that claim. Instead, i'm asking a different and arguably more important question: Can persistent corruption reshape the environment in which intelligence is developed, expressed, and rewarded? The distinction matters. Human intelligence is not exercised in a vacuum. It operates within political, economic, and social systems that reward certain behaviours while discouraging others. If those systems become persistently corrupt, they may change how people think, be...