Not Even for Merriment - Economic Concentration and Institutions
Abstract
Institutional design is often argued to be an expression and an instrument of the will of powerful
interests. In this dissertation, I examine the impact of diversification and changes in the economy on
institutional outcomes. I argue that for elites to achieve the outcomes they desire, they must act
collectively something that is easier in settings where elite interests are uniform and stable. When
interests are more diverse or when the set of relevant actors and interests are more in flux, collective
action among the elites will be harder and may give way to competition. Building on the literature on
regulatory capture, free trade, corruption and institutions more broadly, I argue that a changing set of
actors and competition can lead narrow interests to cancel each other out. Unable to achieve their most
desired institutional outcomes they can be forced to accept more inclusive and impartial institutions as
a compromise. I test this argument in three papers. First, I lay out the theory illustrating it with the
diverging institutional fortunes of Ohio and Kentucky during the antebellum era. In the second paper, I
use data on the diversification of production and exports to test the idea that diversification of the
economy leads to more impartial institutions. The findings support the theory that it does. In the third
paper, I focus on the relationship between economic diversification and democracy and deal with the
objection that it may be that diversification/concentration is only a proxy for an oil curse, I do not find
this is the case. In sum, the findings in this dissertation supports the claim that economic change and
diversification matters for institutional outcomes.
Parts of work
Olander, P. (2015) Dynamic Economic Growth as a Constraint on Elite Behavior. In: Carl Dahlström and Lena Wägnerud (Eds.), “Elites, Institutions and the Quality of Government”. Palgrave Olander, P. (2018) Issues of Concentrated Interests - Economic Diversification and Institutional Quality. Unpublished manuscript. Olander, P. (2018) Cursed Concentration? The oil curse, economic diversification and the cohesion of elite interests. Unpublished manuscript.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
Institution
Department of Political Science ; Statsvetenskapliga institutionen
Disputation
Fredagen den 7 september 2018, kl. 13.15, Torgny Segersedtsalen, Vasaparken
Date of defence
2018-09-07
petrus.olander@gu.se
View/ Open
Date
2018-08-13Author
Olander, Petrus
Keywords
Institutions
economic diversification
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-984402-6-3
Series/Report no.
STUDIER I POLITIK Statsvetenskapliga institutionen, Göteborgs universitet
156
Language
eng