scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Dependency Revisited: International Markets, Business Cycles, and Social Spending in the Developing World

Erik Wibbels
- 01 Apr 2006 - 
- Vol. 60, Iss: 02, pp 433-468
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, Haggard et al. claim that while increased exposure to the global economy is associated with increased welfare effort in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the opposite holds in the developing world.
Abstract
While increased exposure to the global economy is associated with increased welfare effort in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the opposite holds in the developing world. These differences are typically explained with reference to domestic politics. Tradables, unions, and the like in the developing world are assumed to have less power or interests divergent to those in the OECD—interests that militate against social spending. I claim that such arguments can be complemented with a recognition that developed and developing nations have distinct patterns of integration into global markets. While income shocks associated with international markets are quite modest in the OECD, they are profound in developing nations. In the OECD, governments can respond to those shocks by borrowing on capital markets and spending countercyclically on social programs. No such opportunity exists for most governments in the developing world, most of which have limited access to capital markets in tough times, more significant incentives to balance budgets, and as a result cut social spending at the times it is most needed. Thus, while internationally inspired volatility and income shocks seem not to threaten the underpinnings of the welfare state in rich nations, it undercuts the capacity of governments in the developing world to smooth consumption (and particularly consumption by the poor) across the business cycle.The author would like to thank Steph Haggard, Kristin Bakke, Wongi Choe, Tim Jones, and seminar participants at Duke University, Penn State University, Washington University, MIT, and the University of New Mexico for their helpful comments. Nancy Brune, Mark Hallerberg and Rolf Strauch, and Nita Rudra were very generous in providing their capital account, OECD fiscal, and potential labor power data, respectively.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Dismantling the Welfare State? Reagan, Thatcher, and the Politics of Retrenchment

TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown how to find a user's guide to operate a product on the web. But this is not a good way to obtain details about operating certain products.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oil, Nontax Revenue, and the Redistributional Foundations of Regime Stability

TL;DR: The authors show that an increase in nontax revenue should be associated with less taxation of elites in democracies, more social spending in dictatorships, and more stability for both regime types, and find support for all three hypotheses in a cross-sectional time-series analysis, covering all countries and years for which the necessary data are available.

Global Political Economy

Mark Beeson
TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace the development and structure of the global political economy and detail how these processes have become global and what impact this is likely to have on states and markets.
Posted Content

Where Did All the Growth Go

Journal ArticleDOI

Politics and Social Spending in Latin America

TL;DR: This paper examined the determinants of social expenditure in an unbalanced pooled time-series analysis for 18 Latin American countries for the period 1970 to 2000, with a full complement of regime, partisanship, state structure, economic and demographic variables, making their analysis comparable to analyses of welfare states in advanced industrial countries.
References
More filters
Book

An introduction to the bootstrap

TL;DR: This article presents bootstrap methods for estimation, using simple arguments, with Minitab macros for implementing these methods, as well as some examples of how these methods could be used for estimation purposes.
Journal ArticleDOI

What to do (and not to do) with time-series cross-section data

TL;DR: The generalized least squares approach of Parks produces standard errors that lead to extreme overconfidence, often underestimating variability by 50% or more, and a new method is offered that is both easier to implement and produces accurate standard errors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distributive Politics and Economic Growth

TL;DR: This paper analyzed the relationship between economics and politics and concluded that inequality is conducive to the adoption of growth-retarding policies, and presented cross-country evidence consistent with it. But their analysis focused on how an economy's initial configuration of resources shapes the political struggle for income and wealth distribution, and how that, in turn, affects long run growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Determination of the Public Debt

TL;DR: In this paper, a public debt theory is constructed in which the Ricardian invariance theorem is valid as a first-order proposition but where the dependence excess burden on the timing of taxation implies an optimal time path of debt issue.