Democracy Doesn’t Always Happen Over Night: Regime Change in Stages and Economic Growth

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Date

2021-02

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Publisher

V-Dem Institute

Abstract

We motivate and empirically analyse the idea that democratic regime change is not a dis-crete event but a two-stage process: in the first stage, autocracies enter into an ‘episode’ of political liberalization which can last for years or even decades; in the second stage, the ultimate outcome of the episode manifests itself and a nation undergoes regime change or not. Failure to account for this chronology risks biased estimates of the economic e˙ects of democratic regime change since this ignores the relevance of the counterfactual group in which liberalisation did not culminate in a democratic transition. Using novel Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) data on Episodes of Regime Transformation (ERT) for a large sample of countries from 1950 to 2014 we study this phenomenon in a repeated-treatment di˙erence-in-di˙erence framework which accounts for non-parallel pre-treatment trends and selection into treatment. Our findings suggest that a single event approach signifi-cantly underestimates the economic benefits from lasting democratic regime change.

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Keywords

Democracy, Growth, Political Development, Difference-in-Difference, Inter- active Fixed Effects

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