That's true in places like India, but not really in the U.S. I own a company that does government contracting and have never "paid someone off" or done anything remotely "corrupt" but we have been wildly successful nonetheless.
There are NUMEROUS mechanisms for oversight and redress at every level - but the typical commercial-focused company doesn't understand them, so they don't research or learn what they are and just give up thereby developing a very misguided interpretation of the system akin to what you believe it is like.
This was true in the US before we created all these stupid regulations, which is why they were created. 1700s/1800s, "spoils system", etc. That is the whole reason the regulations (and attendant overhead) exist.
(I bootstrapped a US government contractor and have worked for several others.)
Can you clarify your point, were you saying that the US had 3rd world-levels of corruption before the regulation, or were you saying that the US was as fine as it is today, before the regulations.
The former- before the regulations in the 1800's there wasn't even really a concept of 'third-world levels of corruption' as it was universal to every government.
I've worked for commercial, government and semi-government organizations. It's not corrupt in the sense that it's illegal. The problem is that while the stakes are high within the private sector there are no such stakes within the government sector. Yet people do get payed high stakes salaries. There's no incentive for efficiency. In the government realm when the end of year is nearing, departments start burning through their budgets to ensure they don't receive less the next year. Inefficiency is rewarded. It simply means more people get to pay for nice mortgages.
There are NUMEROUS mechanisms for oversight and redress at every level - but the typical commercial-focused company doesn't understand them, so they don't research or learn what they are and just give up thereby developing a very misguided interpretation of the system akin to what you believe it is like.