What is Quality of Government? A Theory of Impartial Political Institutions
Abstract
The last years have seen a growth in research on “good governance” and the quality
of government institutions. This development has been propelled by empirical
findings that such institutions might hold the key to understanding economic growth
in developing countries. We argue that a key issue has not been addressed, namely the
question of what “good governance”—or the quality of government —actually means
at the conceptual level. Economists’ definitions are either extremely broad or suffer
from a functionalist slant that weakens their applicability. We argue that a more
coherent and specific definition of quality of government is necessary to attain, and
propose one such definition, namely the impartiality of government institutions that
implement government policies. The argument is based on the idea that a democratic
system has two sides that are guided by opposite norms: partisanship for the
representational process and impartiality for the process of implementation.
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http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350634_2005_6-rothstein_teorell.pdf
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Date
2005Author
Rothstein, Bo
Teorell, Jan
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2005:06
Language
eng