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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pablo F. Druck
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Universidad de Chile 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=22134101
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author Pablo F. Druck
author_facet Pablo F. Druck
contents Economic development as a matter of political geography Pablo F. Druck Jorge M. Streb Economía y Finanzas income per capita limited government polity persistence economic development political constraints Can limited government be a driving force of economic development? This ideagoes back to Montesquieu, and is closely related to recent research in institutionaleconomics. Measuring limited government with the Henisz political constraintsindex, and economic development with income per capita, the paper first does acausality test to see whether political constraints lead income per capita. Sinceboth are persistent variables, their differences are analyzed. The evidence fromthe 1960-1990 period indeed suggests that increases in political constraintsprecede economic growth. The effect of political constraints might take a longtime period to set in, so a second test looks at the link between income percapita and polity persistence, conditioned on the degree of political constraints.Polity persistence is positively linked to income per capita with high politicalconstraints, but there is no link with low political constraints. This broaderevidence suggests that limited government has been conducive to economicdevelopment over the long run. 2007 artículo científico 0304-2758 https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=22134101 en http://www.redalyc.org/revista.oa?id=221 Estudios de Economía application/pdf Universidad de Chile Estudios de Economía (Chile) Num.1 Vol.34
format Artículo científico
id redalyc_22134101
language en
publishDate 2007
publisher Universidad de Chile
spellingShingle Economic development as a matter of political geography
Pablo F. Druck
Economía y Finanzas
income per capita
limited government
polity persistence
economic development
political constraints
Economic development as a matter of political geography Pablo F. Druck Jorge M. Streb Economía y Finanzas income per capita limited government polity persistence economic development political constraints Can limited government be a driving force of economic development? This ideagoes back to Montesquieu, and is closely related to recent research in institutionaleconomics. Measuring limited government with the Henisz political constraintsindex, and economic development with income per capita, the paper first does acausality test to see whether political constraints lead income per capita. Sinceboth are persistent variables, their differences are analyzed. The evidence fromthe 1960-1990 period indeed suggests that increases in political constraintsprecede economic growth. The effect of political constraints might take a longtime period to set in, so a second test looks at the link between income percapita and polity persistence, conditioned on the degree of political constraints.Polity persistence is positively linked to income per capita with high politicalconstraints, but there is no link with low political constraints. This broaderevidence suggests that limited government has been conducive to economicdevelopment over the long run. 2007 artículo científico 0304-2758 https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=22134101 en http://www.redalyc.org/revista.oa?id=221 Estudios de Economía application/pdf Universidad de Chile Estudios de Economía (Chile) Num.1 Vol.34
title Economic development as a matter of political geography
topic Economía y Finanzas
income per capita
limited government
polity persistence
economic development
political constraints
url https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=22134101