Political Institutions and Growth Collapses
29 Pages Posted: 21 Apr 2011
There are 2 versions of this paper
Date Written: May 2000
Abstract
This paper tests whether Rodrik`s (1999) results that institutions for conflict management are associated with the ability to react to economic shocks are robust to different ways of defining the quality of such institutions. We measure the quality of conflict management institutions with two different indices. The first is an index of political constraints on the ability of the executive to impose its will. These constraints limit the ability of the government to arbitrarily change the rules of the game and therefore may reduce redistributive struggles. The second index measures the degree of political particularism. We define political particularism as the policymakers` ability to further their career by catering to narrow interests rather than broader national platforms. The indices used in this paper solve the endogeneity and subjectivity biases that affect Rodrik`s measure of institutional quality. We find strong support for the idea that high levels of political constraints and intermediate levels of political particularism are associated with a quick recovery from economic shocks.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Reform Fatigue: Symptoms, Reasons, Implications
By Eduardo A. Lora, Ugo Panizza, ...
-
Financial Markets and Politics: The Confidence Game in Latin American Emerging Economies
By Juan Martinez and Javier Santiso
-
The Electoral Consequences of the Washington Consensus
By Eduardo A. Lora and Mauricio Olivera
-
The Electoral Consequences of the Washington Consensus
By Eduardo A. Lora and Mauricio Olivera
-
Why are Latin Americans so Unhappy About Reforms?
By Ugo Panizza and Mónica Yañez
-
Political Constraints and Public Support for Market Reform
By Raj M. Desai and Anders Olofsgård
-
Portfolio Managers and Elections in Emerging Economies: How Investors Dislike Political Uncertainty
By Emmanuel Frot and Javier Santiso
-
The Latin American Left’s Mandate: Free-Market Policies and Issue Voting in New Democracies
By Andy Baker and Kenneth F. Greene
-
Ulysses, the Sirens and the Art of Navigation: Political and Technical Rationality in Latin America
By Laurence Whitehead and Javier Santiso