Which Dictators Produce Quality of Government?
Abstract
This study deals with the effects of authoritarian regimes on state capacity or the
quality of government (QoG): do some types of dictatorship (military, monarchy,
single-party or personalist) perform better than others? More importantly, which are
the mechanisms through which different authoritarian rulers produce better
government? The paper argues theoretically, first, that single-party regimes are more
responsive to citizens’ demands than other types of authoritarian rule because they
have a structured mechanism to channel citizens’ “voices” (the single party). As a
consequence, they will provide QoG following societal demands, which are low in
low-income countries and high in high-income ones. Second, the effect of the other
relevant authoritarian types – monarchies and military regimes – is exclusively
conditional on rulers’ self-interests. With short-sighted rulers, monarchies and
military regimes will tend to under-provide QoG. In contrast, when monarchs and
military rulers have long-term horizons, these types of authoritarian regimes will have
a positive effect on QoG. Employing a sample of over 70 authoritarian countries from
1983-2003, we find empirical support for these interactive effects. In single-party
autocracies, the higher (lower) the average income, the higher (the lower) the QoG;
while in monarchies and military regimes, the longer (shorter) the government’s time
horizon, the higher (the lower) the QoG.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350157_2010_11_charron_lapuente.pdf
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Date
2010-05Author
Charron, Nicholas
Lapuente, Victor
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2010:11
Language
eng