Does Democracy Produce Quality of Government?
Abstract
This paper analyzes the effects of political regimes over state capacity or the
quality of government (QoG): do democratic states perform better than authoritarian
ones? Previous studies on this puzzle point to a nonlinear relationship between
democracy and government quality. We argue that QoG is a function of both forces of
supply (leaders which have the power to make reforms) and demand (citizens’ desire for
mid-to-long term investments over short term needs), the latter of which is a function of
economic development. In democratic states, leaders have stronger incentives to improve
QoG after a certain degree of wealth is reached, while in poorer countries they have little
incentive for long-term bureaucratic investments. Thus we predict that the relationship
between democracy and QoG is conditional, based on economic development. With over
125 countries in our sample, we test our hypothesis using time series, panel data and
spatial models and find strong empirical support for our claim.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350706_2009_1_charron_lapuente.pdf
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Date
2009-01Author
Charron, Nicholas
Lapuente, Victor
Keywords
democracy
governance
development
corruption
democratization
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2009:01
Language
eng