| I think we need to separate elected power and knowledge. If you're taking goods, services, favours, even future employment, as a politician (or for your friends, family), you're corrupt. If you're hiring a politician after they've left office to buy their influence (they do know people) or their oratory skill, or —as I started this— what they know about the law, I think that's fair game. If you try to clamp down on the latter, nobody with any existing influence or industry (or F&F with same) will want anything to do with that area of government. I would rather have slightly corrupt but competent politicians than pure-hearted idiots. Just to remember, there are shades of grey. A senator may have financial interest in the biggest industry in their state, but pushing for laws that further that industry isn't necessarily corrupt. The only way you sort this out is getting rid of the middle-man and holding referendums on everything. And even that is vulnerable to corrupt influence. |
Corruption is a huge problem with huge costs to society, however hard they are to quantify. It's like a cancer that grows exponentially and kills institutions, and the fallout is messy and difficult. So while everything you said has some sense behind it, I don't believe the cost of eliminating those potential conflicts of interest (which I see as small) approaches the value of reduced corruption (which I see as large.)