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Democracy and economic growth

Democracy and economic growth and development have had a strong correlative and interactive relationship throughout history. While evidence of this relationship's existence is irrefutable,[1] economists' and historians' opinions of its exact nature have been sharply split, hence the latter has been the subject of many debates and studies.

Ancient beginnings and correlation edit

The period of Ancient Greece 4th century B.C. and later of the Roman Empire marks the beginning not only of democracy, but as well as its connection to economic growth.[citation needed] All throughout history, up until the present they have stayed intertwined.[citation needed] While there is no doubt of their existing relationship, whether it being in favor of economic development or democracy, there is no evidence to claim that it is in fact a causal relationship.[2]

In other words, a country that undergoes democratization does not have to necessarily experience economic growth, most often measured in income per capita, or vice versa. For every such case there exists a counter example. What this means is that there are multiple factors, such as political stability and political institutions, social insurance, government capacity, religion and many other which influence the outcome. In two similar countries, almost identical democratic regimes can yield completely different results.[3] However, the concepts highly complement each other, and in cases through history where they were separated there has been great difficulty.

Effects of democracy on economic growth edit

Democratization of a country from a non-democratic regime is usually preceded by a fall in GDP, and a volatile but expected growth in the long run. On the other hand, authoritarian regimes experience significant growth at the beginning and decline in the long run.[4] The cause of such behavior is that non-democratic regimes, mainly authoritarian ones, are more effective at implementing decisive policies and choices as well as solving ethnic and sub-national conflicts, but are unsustainable in the long run as there is more incentive to extract money from society which in turn leads to less prosperity.[5] Democratic regimes revolve around institutions and policies which lay the foundations, through which principles of liberty and equality are designed and followed, thus directly or indirectly affecting firms or individuals who benefit from the directives and increase their growth, which in turn has a positive impact on economy.[6]

The positive changes of democracy to economic growth such as delegation of authority and regulations of social conflicts heavily outweigh the negative and restrictive effects, especially when compared to autocracy. One of the main reasons for this is that society, i.e. voters are able to support difficult trade offs and changes when there is no perceived alternative. This is primarily true in countries with a higher level of education. So it ties the development level of a country as one of the decisive factors to undergo positive democratic changes and reforms. Thus, countries that embark in democratization at higher levels of education are more likely than not to continue their development under democracy.[7]

As mentioned before, all of these factors do not guarantee success. As for each such case, there is a failure. There is never a single formula for democracy. The processes in associations with peace, social stability and rapid socioeconomic development are not yet fully understood, which may be the reason for a widespread opinion and many hypotheses.[8]

A 2008 meta-analysis found that democracy has no direct effect on economic growth. However, it has strong and significant indirect effects which contribute to growth. Democracy is associated with higher human capital accumulation, lower inflation, lower political instability, and higher economic freedom.[9] Democracy is closely tied with economic sources of growth, like education levels and lifespan through improvement of educative institutions as well as healthcare. "As democracy expands in developing countries, newly empowered workers are likely to demand better living conditions, health care, access to clean water, and so on—all conditions that contribute to increased life expectancy and, in turn, to increased productivity".[10] There is also some evidence that it is associated with larger governments and more restrictions on international trade.[11]

If leaving out East Asia, then during the last forty-five years poor democracies have grown their economies 50% more rapidly than nondemocracies. Poor democracies such as the Baltic countries, Botswana, Costa Rica, Ghana, and Senegal have grown more rapidly than nondemocracies such as Angola, Syria, Uzbekistan, and Zimbabwe.[12]

Work by Bhaso Ndzendze at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa, has demonstrated that democratizing had led to all African democracies recognizing the economically larger China over Taiwan in search of economic advantage (aid, trade and FDI). This correlation is true in all 7 African who became new democracies after 2000 or were approaching an election following previous electoral performance combined with an economic recession.[13]

Transitions to democracy edit

When another democratic regime fails, e.g. a dictatorship, under a broad variety of conditions. Some disappear in the midst of an economic crises, while other after a long period of prosperity, some after the founding dictator dies or some as a result of defeat in foreign wars. However, observing the conditions and predicting a transition to democracy is so difficult, because the conditions only lay the ground-works for the possibility that it may occur. But it is actions of people under these conditions that shape the outcome. Many dissertations have been written on the history of different transitions, and the opinions are divided into two main categories. One party proclaims that it boils down to the creation of civil society, which comes to fruition almost of itself. A process fostered by transformations of the social structure. However, others proclaim that it is those that start with play the "strategic game" and reach a bargain under conditions taken as a datum. The literature pits "sociological" against "strategic" perspectives, yet we can say that both of them are needed for a transition, and they are not mutually exclusive.

Survival of democracies edit

The conditions for their origins may be hard to determine, but the factors on which its survival depends are easily identifiable, and are tightly connected to economic growth, that is the level of development measured as per capita income. Another factor would be the education of the labor force. Specifically the years of schooling of an average citizen. This greatly elevates the probability that a democracy will survive. However, even though income and education are highly correlated, their impact seems to be to some extent independent, with the impact of per capita income being much stronger. Empirical patterns show that a democracy is more fragile in countries where per capita income stagnates or declines, but the causality is not clear. The fact that economic growth is tightly connected to democracies does not come as a surprise, since democracies are more frequent among the economically developed countries, and are rarer among poor ones.

Effects of economic development on democracy edit

The notion of economic growth having a greater influence on democracy was a very popular opinion in the 1950s. The most important work on the subject has been done by Lipset 1959 [14] where he states that economic development is one of the prerequisites for democracy. However, this is true. Both concepts are of equal importance and there are many cases where one acts as a prerequisite for the other, i.e. highly influencing the outcome.

Economic development may influence democracy in many ways. By tightening the revolution constraint, creating rising inequality or simply increasing the level of income in the society.[15] And while the increase in GDP may be the primary method of measurement, there is much more, such as forming or greatly changing productive relationships, migrating firms and workers to cities up to affecting human capital and technology. This means that as an economic structure transforms, and since it is related to capital intensity, capital itself becomes more important than land, which is one of the reasons that states with a higher income per capita would generally perform better.

As mentioned, the causality of economic development and democracy is inconclusive. However, if we consider that democracy should be supported by some preconditions, it is economic growth that creates these conditions for democracy: industrialization, urbanization, widespread of education and literacy, wealth, and a strong middle class which are involved with the protection of their right and issues of public affairs. Work done by Lipset is best well known on this topic. By his comparative studies Lipset shows a strong statistical association between GNP per capita and the level of democracy, to finally conclude that "the more well-to-do a nation, the greater the chance that it will sustain democracy". It is especially relevant in just shaping democracies, even though they may survive in poorer conditions.

As democracies require certain political institutions, it is quite interesting that they do not have a high impact on economic growth. What matters for economic development is, in fact political stability, rather than a particular political institution. As it is safe to assume that any political institution will promote development as long as it is stable, which means that the danger lies in political instability.[16] And as measured in the past by the frequency of strikes, demonstrations, riots, it is much greater in democracies, and a lot less likely in e.g. dictatorships. Yet, political instability does not affect economic growth in democracies, only in dictatorships. The reasons for this are not entirely clear, whether it may be due to institutional constraints or of motivations of those who govern democracies. Under dictatorships, it slows down significantly when the tenure of rulers is threatened. Similar outcomes emerge under various forms of "socio-political unrest" such as strikes, anti-government demonstrations and riots. Under different regimes, political phenomena have a different meaning, and as such, it is not surprising that economic actors react differently. Under dictatorships, whenever the regime is threatened, or there are expected changes, workers or masses of people assemble to strike and protest against their opposition, that is the government, and the economy suffers. Under democracies, this is rarer, since everyone knows that the government will change from time to time, and while they know that they are able to protest in the same manner, most often than not they do not. For instance, it would be enriching to see Gerald Scully for some strong arguments on political instability and growth. Studies actually observe that democracies can somewhat affect growth. Studies have also shown that the low economic growth may increase the probability of political instability. In fact democracies have a negative but weak impact on growth. but we can't miss addressing that major instability on involving dramatical political changes can be harmful for economic growth.[17]

Case studies edit

Empirical data tends to consistently suggest a casual relationship between democracy and economic development. The casual direction does appear to change, however. In some nations, economic growth has been observed to promote democracy, while in others the opposite is true.[18] For instance, research done in post-socialist nations has shown increases in political freedom to have little to no effect on economic growth, however changes in political freedom have been influenced by the aforementioned growth.[19] Meanwhile, wider studies have found democracy to improve economic growth when investigating the effects of democratic variables such as increased government spending, increased private investment due to higher economic freedom, and even social unrest.[20]

The first showings in Ancient Greece in the city of Athens show a highly positive correlation with respect to economic growth and democracy. With the introduction of markets, specialization and reforms like having trial by jury, civil liberties as well as free speech, they were able to sustain a self-sufficient city at the public expense. The first document describing such a structure was written by Xenophon.[21]

Romans enjoyed an even greater boom to their economy. Granted a lot of their success was due to their unbeatable production of iron as well as the development of trade routes i.e. Pax Romana.[22] They ruled with a mixture of kingship, aristocracy and democracy. Despite their accomplishments from the reformed political structure, the need to invest in the military to keep their growing competition at bay, by producing less and less valuable coins, ultimately led to their collapse, recessing back to the country side and barter system.

England is another prime example, during the period of the transition from mercantilism to liberalism. The introduction of international trade shows the requirement of the needed change in political institutions and policies for further development. Individuals which enjoyed more political power due to their increased profits in international trade influenced the political institutions to grant them the tools to further their own goals, creating different policies, by which the economy grew as a whole.[23]

Further ahead, after World War II over 100 nations undergone the transition of political and economic development. In the past 2 decades democratic revolution has been sweeping the whole world. There are 117 out of 191 independent states that declare themselves as democratic.[8] Even so, while cases like Brazil, India and Mauritius have had several important economic achievements in their late-democratic period, it is not safe to imply that these countries are exemplary. Although they have performed better than expected, many more changes lie in the future, while cases like Tunisia and Libya have had a much better period before their transition to a democratic regime.[24] Reasons being their culture, history and many others.

There are several once very impoverished countries that have experienced significant and rapid economic growth without democratic institutions. Some examples of their respective per capital GDP's are the following: Chile ($12 700), Hong Kong ($25 200), Taiwan ($12 000), Singapore ($28 000) and South Korea ($13 600).[25] To the extent that political democracy exists in these countries today, it has only recently emerged. What they have in common, being backward countries in the past, is that they all have relatively free markets. We could say that they are economically free, meaning they have little to no protectionism, i.e. tariff and quotas on imports, except for South Korea. This allows them to relieve the citizens of the burden in the form of taxation and economic regulation, and this is one of the reasons of their growth. Another characteristic common between them and vital is that they have secure property rights and the rule of law. A different case can be shown with India, where economic prosperity was jeopardized due to people forming interest groups and losing their political freedom. This compromises the free market institutions which are essential to economic growth. A similar case can be said about Africa north of the Sahara.

References edit

  1. ^ http://www.columbia.edu/~flr9/documents/Rivera-Batiz_Democracy_Governance_Growth.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ http://scholar.harvard.edu/jrobinson/files/jr_econdevelopment.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ Pereira, Carlos; Teles, Vladimir (24 May 2017). "Political Institutions, Economic Growth, and Democracy: The Substitute Effect - Brookings Institution".
  4. ^ "Does democracy boost economic growth?". World Economic Forum. 20 May 2014.
  5. ^ http://www-personal.umd.umich.edu/~delittle/Democracy%20and%20development.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  6. ^ "Do we have to choose between democracy and growth?". World Economic Forum. 24 April 2015.
  7. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-11. Retrieved 2017-04-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^ a b "Democracy". icpd.org.
  9. ^ Doucouliagos, Hristos; Ulubaşoğlu, Mehmet Ali (18 January 2008). "Democracy and Economic Growth: A Meta-Analysis". American Journal of Political Science. 52 (1): 61–83. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5907.2007.00299.x. ISSN 0092-5853.
  10. ^ Baum, Matthew A.; Lake, David A. (April 2003). "The Political Economy of Growth: Democracy and Human Capital". American Journal of Political Science. 47 (2): 333. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.414.668. doi:10.1111/1540-5907.00023. JSTOR 3186142.
  11. ^ Doucouliagos, H., Ulubasoglu, M (2006). "Democracy and Economic Growth: A meta-analysis". School of Accounting, Economics and Finance Deakin University Australia.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ . Carnegie Council. Archived from the original on 2006-06-28.
  13. ^ Ndzendze, Bhaso (2021). "'Domestic Audiences and Economic Opportunity Cost: African Democratisation as a Determinant in the Recognition of China over Taiwan, 2001–2018'". Journal of Asian and African Studies. 56 (3): 434–454. doi:10.1177/0021909620926531. S2CID 225703426.
  14. ^ https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/levitsky/files/lipset_1959.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  15. ^ Tecnologia, Codely. "Moodle USP: e-Disciplinas" (PDF). edisciplinas.usp.br.
  16. ^ http://politics.as.nyu.edu/docs/IO/2800/sisson.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  17. ^ Feng, Yi (1997). "Democracy, Political Stability and Economic Growth". British Journal of Political Science. 27 (3): 391–418. doi:10.1017/S0007123497000197. JSTOR 194123. S2CID 154749945.
  18. ^ Democracy and Economic Growth: A Causal Analysis. Comparative Politics, Volume 33, p.463-473 (2001)
  19. ^ Economic freedom, democracy and economic growth: a causal investigation in transition countries. Post-Communist Economies, Volume 25 p.267-288 (2013)
  20. ^ Democracy’s Effect on Economic Growth: A Pooled Time-Series Analysis, 1951-1980. Studies in Comparative International Development (2002)
  21. ^ Finley, M. I. (1 May 1970). "Aristotle and Economic Analysis". Past and Present. 47 (1): 3–25. doi:10.1093/past/47.1.3.
  22. ^ ["Chapters of European economic history" by Tomas Evan ] ISBN 978-80-246-2814-1
  23. ^ https://economics.mit.edu/files/4466
  24. ^ Anderson, Lisa (24 May 2017). "Demystifying the Arab Spring: Parsing the Differences Between Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya". Foreign Affairs. 90 (3): 2–7. JSTOR 23039401.
  25. ^ http://www.democracy.uci.edu/files/docs/conferences/grad/chen.pdf[bare URL PDF]

democracy, economic, growth, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expan. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article October 2017 The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this article Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Democracy and economic growth news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Democracy and economic growth and development have had a strong correlative and interactive relationship throughout history While evidence of this relationship s existence is irrefutable 1 economists and historians opinions of its exact nature have been sharply split hence the latter has been the subject of many debates and studies Contents 1 Ancient beginnings and correlation 2 Effects of democracy on economic growth 2 1 Transitions to democracy 2 2 Survival of democracies 3 Effects of economic development on democracy 4 Case studies 5 ReferencesAncient beginnings and correlation editThe period of Ancient Greece 4th century B C and later of the Roman Empire marks the beginning not only of democracy but as well as its connection to economic growth citation needed All throughout history up until the present they have stayed intertwined citation needed While there is no doubt of their existing relationship whether it being in favor of economic development or democracy there is no evidence to claim that it is in fact a causal relationship 2 In other words a country that undergoes democratization does not have to necessarily experience economic growth most often measured in income per capita or vice versa For every such case there exists a counter example What this means is that there are multiple factors such as political stability and political institutions social insurance government capacity religion and many other which influence the outcome In two similar countries almost identical democratic regimes can yield completely different results 3 However the concepts highly complement each other and in cases through history where they were separated there has been great difficulty Effects of democracy on economic growth editThis section possibly contains original research Bhaso Ndzendze s research was likely contributed by himself Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Democratization of a country from a non democratic regime is usually preceded by a fall in GDP and a volatile but expected growth in the long run On the other hand authoritarian regimes experience significant growth at the beginning and decline in the long run 4 The cause of such behavior is that non democratic regimes mainly authoritarian ones are more effective at implementing decisive policies and choices as well as solving ethnic and sub national conflicts but are unsustainable in the long run as there is more incentive to extract money from society which in turn leads to less prosperity 5 Democratic regimes revolve around institutions and policies which lay the foundations through which principles of liberty and equality are designed and followed thus directly or indirectly affecting firms or individuals who benefit from the directives and increase their growth which in turn has a positive impact on economy 6 The positive changes of democracy to economic growth such as delegation of authority and regulations of social conflicts heavily outweigh the negative and restrictive effects especially when compared to autocracy One of the main reasons for this is that society i e voters are able to support difficult trade offs and changes when there is no perceived alternative This is primarily true in countries with a higher level of education So it ties the development level of a country as one of the decisive factors to undergo positive democratic changes and reforms Thus countries that embark in democratization at higher levels of education are more likely than not to continue their development under democracy 7 As mentioned before all of these factors do not guarantee success As for each such case there is a failure There is never a single formula for democracy The processes in associations with peace social stability and rapid socioeconomic development are not yet fully understood which may be the reason for a widespread opinion and many hypotheses 8 A 2008 meta analysis found that democracy has no direct effect on economic growth However it has strong and significant indirect effects which contribute to growth Democracy is associated with higher human capital accumulation lower inflation lower political instability and higher economic freedom 9 Democracy is closely tied with economic sources of growth like education levels and lifespan through improvement of educative institutions as well as healthcare As democracy expands in developing countries newly empowered workers are likely to demand better living conditions health care access to clean water and so on all conditions that contribute to increased life expectancy and in turn to increased productivity 10 There is also some evidence that it is associated with larger governments and more restrictions on international trade 11 If leaving out East Asia then during the last forty five years poor democracies have grown their economies 50 more rapidly than nondemocracies Poor democracies such as the Baltic countries Botswana Costa Rica Ghana and Senegal have grown more rapidly than nondemocracies such as Angola Syria Uzbekistan and Zimbabwe 12 Work by Bhaso Ndzendze at the University of Johannesburg South Africa has demonstrated that democratizing had led to all African democracies recognizing the economically larger China over Taiwan in search of economic advantage aid trade and FDI This correlation is true in all 7 African who became new democracies after 2000 or were approaching an election following previous electoral performance combined with an economic recession 13 Transitions to democracy edit When another democratic regime fails e g a dictatorship under a broad variety of conditions Some disappear in the midst of an economic crises while other after a long period of prosperity some after the founding dictator dies or some as a result of defeat in foreign wars However observing the conditions and predicting a transition to democracy is so difficult because the conditions only lay the ground works for the possibility that it may occur But it is actions of people under these conditions that shape the outcome Many dissertations have been written on the history of different transitions and the opinions are divided into two main categories One party proclaims that it boils down to the creation of civil society which comes to fruition almost of itself A process fostered by transformations of the social structure However others proclaim that it is those that start with play the strategic game and reach a bargain under conditions taken as a datum The literature pits sociological against strategic perspectives yet we can say that both of them are needed for a transition and they are not mutually exclusive Survival of democracies edit The conditions for their origins may be hard to determine but the factors on which its survival depends are easily identifiable and are tightly connected to economic growth that is the level of development measured as per capita income Another factor would be the education of the labor force Specifically the years of schooling of an average citizen This greatly elevates the probability that a democracy will survive However even though income and education are highly correlated their impact seems to be to some extent independent with the impact of per capita income being much stronger Empirical patterns show that a democracy is more fragile in countries where per capita income stagnates or declines but the causality is not clear The fact that economic growth is tightly connected to democracies does not come as a surprise since democracies are more frequent among the economically developed countries and are rarer among poor ones Effects of economic development on democracy editThe notion of economic growth having a greater influence on democracy was a very popular opinion in the 1950s The most important work on the subject has been done by Lipset 1959 14 where he states that economic development is one of the prerequisites for democracy However this is true Both concepts are of equal importance and there are many cases where one acts as a prerequisite for the other i e highly influencing the outcome Economic development may influence democracy in many ways By tightening the revolution constraint creating rising inequality or simply increasing the level of income in the society 15 And while the increase in GDP may be the primary method of measurement there is much more such as forming or greatly changing productive relationships migrating firms and workers to cities up to affecting human capital and technology This means that as an economic structure transforms and since it is related to capital intensity capital itself becomes more important than land which is one of the reasons that states with a higher income per capita would generally perform better As mentioned the causality of economic development and democracy is inconclusive However if we consider that democracy should be supported by some preconditions it is economic growth that creates these conditions for democracy industrialization urbanization widespread of education and literacy wealth and a strong middle class which are involved with the protection of their right and issues of public affairs Work done by Lipset is best well known on this topic By his comparative studies Lipset shows a strong statistical association between GNP per capita and the level of democracy to finally conclude that the more well to do a nation the greater the chance that it will sustain democracy It is especially relevant in just shaping democracies even though they may survive in poorer conditions As democracies require certain political institutions it is quite interesting that they do not have a high impact on economic growth What matters for economic development is in fact political stability rather than a particular political institution As it is safe to assume that any political institution will promote development as long as it is stable which means that the danger lies in political instability 16 And as measured in the past by the frequency of strikes demonstrations riots it is much greater in democracies and a lot less likely in e g dictatorships Yet political instability does not affect economic growth in democracies only in dictatorships The reasons for this are not entirely clear whether it may be due to institutional constraints or of motivations of those who govern democracies Under dictatorships it slows down significantly when the tenure of rulers is threatened Similar outcomes emerge under various forms of socio political unrest such as strikes anti government demonstrations and riots Under different regimes political phenomena have a different meaning and as such it is not surprising that economic actors react differently Under dictatorships whenever the regime is threatened or there are expected changes workers or masses of people assemble to strike and protest against their opposition that is the government and the economy suffers Under democracies this is rarer since everyone knows that the government will change from time to time and while they know that they are able to protest in the same manner most often than not they do not For instance it would be enriching to see Gerald Scully for some strong arguments on political instability and growth Studies actually observe that democracies can somewhat affect growth Studies have also shown that the low economic growth may increase the probability of political instability In fact democracies have a negative but weak impact on growth but we can t miss addressing that major instability on involving dramatical political changes can be harmful for economic growth 17 Case studies editEmpirical data tends to consistently suggest a casual relationship between democracy and economic development The casual direction does appear to change however In some nations economic growth has been observed to promote democracy while in others the opposite is true 18 For instance research done in post socialist nations has shown increases in political freedom to have little to no effect on economic growth however changes in political freedom have been influenced by the aforementioned growth 19 Meanwhile wider studies have found democracy to improve economic growth when investigating the effects of democratic variables such as increased government spending increased private investment due to higher economic freedom and even social unrest 20 The first showings in Ancient Greece in the city of Athens show a highly positive correlation with respect to economic growth and democracy With the introduction of markets specialization and reforms like having trial by jury civil liberties as well as free speech they were able to sustain a self sufficient city at the public expense The first document describing such a structure was written by Xenophon 21 Romans enjoyed an even greater boom to their economy Granted a lot of their success was due to their unbeatable production of iron as well as the development of trade routes i e Pax Romana 22 They ruled with a mixture of kingship aristocracy and democracy Despite their accomplishments from the reformed political structure the need to invest in the military to keep their growing competition at bay by producing less and less valuable coins ultimately led to their collapse recessing back to the country side and barter system England is another prime example during the period of the transition from mercantilism to liberalism The introduction of international trade shows the requirement of the needed change in political institutions and policies for further development Individuals which enjoyed more political power due to their increased profits in international trade influenced the political institutions to grant them the tools to further their own goals creating different policies by which the economy grew as a whole 23 Further ahead after World War II over 100 nations undergone the transition of political and economic development In the past 2 decades democratic revolution has been sweeping the whole world There are 117 out of 191 independent states that declare themselves as democratic 8 Even so while cases like Brazil India and Mauritius have had several important economic achievements in their late democratic period it is not safe to imply that these countries are exemplary Although they have performed better than expected many more changes lie in the future while cases like Tunisia and Libya have had a much better period before their transition to a democratic regime 24 Reasons being their culture history and many others There are several once very impoverished countries that have experienced significant and rapid economic growth without democratic institutions Some examples of their respective per capital GDP s are the following Chile 12 700 Hong Kong 25 200 Taiwan 12 000 Singapore 28 000 and South Korea 13 600 25 To the extent that political democracy exists in these countries today it has only recently emerged What they have in common being backward countries in the past is that they all have relatively free markets We could say that they are economically free meaning they have little to no protectionism i e tariff and quotas on imports except for South Korea This allows them to relieve the citizens of the burden in the form of taxation and economic regulation and this is one of the reasons of their growth Another characteristic common between them and vital is that they have secure property rights and the rule of law A different case can be shown with India where economic prosperity was jeopardized due to people forming interest groups and losing their political freedom This compromises the free market institutions which are essential to economic growth A similar case can be said about Africa north of the Sahara References edit http www columbia edu flr9 documents Rivera Batiz Democracy Governance Growth pdf bare URL PDF http scholar harvard edu jrobinson files jr econdevelopment pdf bare URL PDF Pereira Carlos Teles Vladimir 24 May 2017 Political Institutions Economic Growth and Democracy The Substitute Effect Brookings Institution Does democracy boost economic growth World Economic Forum 20 May 2014 http www personal umd umich edu delittle Democracy 20and 20development pdf bare URL PDF Do we have to choose between democracy and growth World Economic Forum 24 April 2015 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 11 Retrieved 2017 04 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Democracy icpd org Doucouliagos Hristos Ulubasoglu Mehmet Ali 18 January 2008 Democracy and Economic Growth A Meta Analysis American Journal of Political Science 52 1 61 83 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5907 2007 00299 x ISSN 0092 5853 Baum Matthew A Lake David A April 2003 The Political Economy of Growth Democracy and Human Capital American Journal of Political Science 47 2 333 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 414 668 doi 10 1111 1540 5907 00023 JSTOR 3186142 Doucouliagos H Ulubasoglu M 2006 Democracy and Economic Growth A meta analysis School of Accounting Economics and Finance Deakin University Australia a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The Democracy Advantage How Democracies Promote Prosperity and Peace Carnegie Council Archived from the original on 2006 06 28 Ndzendze Bhaso 2021 Domestic Audiences and Economic Opportunity Cost African Democratisation as a Determinant in the Recognition of China over Taiwan 2001 2018 Journal of Asian and African Studies 56 3 434 454 doi 10 1177 0021909620926531 S2CID 225703426 https scholar harvard edu files levitsky files lipset 1959 pdf bare URL PDF Tecnologia Codely Moodle USP e Disciplinas PDF edisciplinas usp br http politics as nyu edu docs IO 2800 sisson pdf bare URL PDF Feng Yi 1997 Democracy Political Stability and Economic Growth British Journal of Political Science 27 3 391 418 doi 10 1017 S0007123497000197 JSTOR 194123 S2CID 154749945 Democracy and Economic Growth A Causal Analysis Comparative Politics Volume 33 p 463 473 2001 Economic freedom democracy and economic growth a causal investigation in transition countries Post Communist Economies Volume 25 p 267 288 2013 Democracy s Effect on Economic Growth A Pooled Time Series Analysis 1951 1980 Studies in Comparative International Development 2002 Finley M I 1 May 1970 Aristotle and Economic Analysis Past and Present 47 1 3 25 doi 10 1093 past 47 1 3 Chapters of European economic history by Tomas Evan ISBN 978 80 246 2814 1 https economics mit edu files 4466 Anderson Lisa 24 May 2017 Demystifying the Arab Spring Parsing the Differences Between Tunisia Egypt and Libya Foreign Affairs 90 3 2 7 JSTOR 23039401 http www democracy uci edu files docs conferences grad chen pdf bare URL PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Democracy and economic growth amp oldid 1186829850, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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