State Capacity and Economic Development: Causal Mechanism or Correlative Filter?
39 Pages Posted: 3 Dec 2018 Last revised: 20 Dec 2019
Date Written: December 18, 2019
Abstract
In this paper, we explore why there are no examples of societies with low state capacity and high economic development. We argue that such an outcome is unlikely because of the nature of investments in state capacity. Societies that become rich in the absence of a strong state invite predation by societies that develop such states. Thus societies invest in state capacity, in part, to plunder other societies’ wealth. Those investments are a form of rent-seeking. Potentially preyed-upon societies are forced to invest in state capacity in turn so as to deter potential attackers. This entails that as soon as a rent seeker enters the game, the likelihood of a low-capacity, high-development society surviving falls. This explains the historical lack of such societies. We thus interpret state capacity not as a causal condition for widespread economic prosperity, but a survivability condition for enjoying this prosperity.
Keywords: State Capacity, Economic Development, Public Goods
JEL Classification: B53; D72; L51
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation