The relationship between political campaign financing and corruption remains a central concern for democracies worldwide. Weak regulatory frameworks, opaque funding channels, and the undue influence of private money undermine electoral integrity and democratic accountability. This article conducts a comparative analysis of campaign finance laws and their impact on political corruption in four jurisdictions: Ghana, South Africa, Nigeria, and the United States. It examines how legal regimes shape transparency, enforcement capacity, and corruption dynamics across diverse political and institutional contexts. Ghana’s Political Parties Act and Electoral Commission (EC) guidelines, South Africa’s recent Political Party Funding Act, Nigeria’s Electoral Act and INEC regulations, and the United States’ Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA), shaped by landmark cases like Citizens United v. FEC, all reveal varying degrees of regulatory success and persistent vulnerabilities. Through this comparative lens, the article identifies best practices, common pitfalls, and cross-context lessons that can inform Ghana’s reform efforts and those of the wider West African region. The analysis demonstrates that strong disclosure requirements, independent enforcement bodies, judicial clarity, and regional cooperation are essential pillars for curbing corruption risks in political financing. The study concludes with practical recommendations aimed at fostering more transparent, accountable, and corruption-resistant campaign finance regimes.
Amadu et al. (Wed,) studied this question.