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Economic Backwardness in Political Perspective

TLDR
In this article, the authors construct a simple model where political elites may block technological and institutional development, because of a "political replacement effect." Innovations often erode elites' incumbency advantage, increasing the likelihood that they will be replaced.
Abstract
We construct a simple model where political elites may block technological and institutional development, because of a ‘political replacement effect.’ Innovations often erode elites’ incumbency advantage, increasing the likelihood that they will be replaced. Fearing replacement, political elites are unwilling to initiate change, and may even block economic development. We show that elites are unlikely to block development when there is a high degree of political competition, or when they are highly entrenched. It is only when political competition is limited and also their power is threatened that elites will block development. We also show that such blocking is more likely to arise when political stakes are higher, and that external threats may reduce the incentives to block. We argue that this model provides an interpretation for why Britain, Germany and the US industrialized during the nineteenth century, while the landed aristocracy in Russia and Austria-Hungary blocked development.

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ReportDOI

Reversal of fortune: geography and institutions in the making of the modern world income distribution*

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the reversal in relative incomes of colonized countries during the past 500 years resulted from societies with good institutions taking advantage of the opportunity to industrialize.
Posted Content

Institutions and the resource curse

TL;DR: In this article, the authors claim that the main reason for diverging experiences is differences in the quality of institutions, and they test this theory building on Sachs and Warner's influential works on the resource curse.
Posted Content

Natural Resources: Curse or Blessing?

TL;DR: This paper surveys a variety of hypotheses and supporting evidence for why some countries benefit and others lose from the presence of natural resources and offers some welfare-based fiscal rules for harnessing resource windfalls in developed and developing economies.
Book ChapterDOI

Chapter 6 Institutions as a Fundamental Cause of Long-Run Growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors develop the empirical and theoretical case that differences in economic institutions are the fundamental cause of economic development and develop a framework for thinking about why economic institutions differ across countries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Institutional Causes, Macroeconomic Symptoms: Volatility, Crises and Growth

TL;DR: The authors showed that countries that inherited more "extractive" institutions from their colonial past were more likely to experience high volatility and economic crises during the postwar period, and they interpreted this relationship as due to the causal effect of institutions on economic outcomes.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

The Economic Implications of Learning by Doing

TL;DR: It is by now incontrovertible that increases in per capita income cannot be explained simply by increases in the capital-labor ratio as mentioned in this paper, and that knowledge is growing in time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Constitutions and Commitment: The Evolution of Institutions Governing Public Choice in Seventeenth-Century England

TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the evolution of the constitutional arrangements in seventeenth-century England following the Glorious Revolution of 1688 and argue that the new institutions allowed the government to commit credibly to upholding property rights.
Book

The stages of economic growth

TL;DR: The Stages of Economic Growth as mentioned in this paper is a seminal work in the theory of economic growth, and it has been extended to include economic and political developments as well as the advances in theory concerning nonlinear and chaotic phenomena.
Journal ArticleDOI

Income distribution, political instability, and investment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify a channel for an inverse relationship between income inequality and growth, and measure socio-political instability with indices which capture the occurrence of more or less violent phenomena of political unrest.
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