♦️ The Mystery: Do Judges Trade Rulings for Jobs? In a robust democracy, the judiciary acts as the ultimate neutral referee. However, researchers Madhav S. Aney, Shubhankar Dam, and Giovanni Ko uncovered a pattern in the Supreme Court of India that suggested the referee might be playing for the home team. They observed a frequent "revolving door" where retiring justices were quickly appointed to prestigious government positions. This raised the specter of a "Quid Pro Quo"—the suspicion that judges were systematically trading favorable verdicts for post-retirement career security. The researchers deconstructed this mystery into two measurable questions: 1. The Incentive: Do judges respond to the temptation of future appointments by ruling in favor of the government? 2. The Reward: Does the government actually follow through by appointing the specific judges who ruled in its favor? While the "ruling-for-jo...
In an ideal world, a judge is a symbol of total independence—someone who decides cases based strictly on the law, regardless of who is standing in the courtroom. However, a groundbreaking study of the Supreme Court of India suggests that a very human concern might be tipping the scales of justice: the search for a job after retirement. The "Quid Pro Quo" Problem In India, Supreme Court judges must retire at age 65. Once they step down, many are barred from practicing law, making the government their most likely employer for prestigious post-retirement roles, such as heading national commissions or tribunals. Researchers analyzed 15 years of legal data (1999–2014) to see if these future job prospects influenced how judges ruled while still on the bench. They found evidence of a "quid pro quo" —a Latin phrase meaning "this for that." Essentially, judges may pander to the government by ruling in its favor, and in exchange, the government rewards them w...