This paper aims to account for varying economic performances and political stability under dictatorship. We argue that economic welfare and social order are the contemporary relevant factors of political regimes' stability. Societies with low natural level of social order tend to tolerate predatory behavior from dictators in exchange of a provision of civil peace. The fear of anarchy may explain why populations are locked in the worst dictatorships. In contrast, in societies enjoying a relative natural civil peace, dictatorship is less likely to be predatory because low economic welfare may destabilize it
Since the recent emphasis on institutions for overall economic development of the countries, t...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...
This paper aims to account for varying economic performances and political stability under dictators...
This paper aims to account for varying economic performances and political stability under dictators...
This paper aims to account for varying economic performances and political stability under dictators...
This article reviews recent advances in economic theories of dictatorships and their lessons for the...
We model growth of dictatorships facing each period an endogenous probability of "political catastro...
This paper analyses the experience of 83 countries from the period of 1950 - 2004 and addresses the ...
This paper explores whether the probability of being punished after losing power leads dictators to ...
This paper analyses the survival of four different growth regimes conditional on political regime tr...
The recent revival of authoritarianism and worldwide losses in democratic quality merit a reassessme...
In this paper we show that in highly unequal societies, different societal groups may support a rent...
Non-democratic regimes vary in the degree to which domestic groups threaten their rule and the exten...
This paper explores conditions under which dictators comply with a social contract. We assume societ...
Since the recent emphasis on institutions for overall economic development of the countries, t...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...
This paper aims to account for varying economic performances and political stability under dictators...
This paper aims to account for varying economic performances and political stability under dictators...
This paper aims to account for varying economic performances and political stability under dictators...
This article reviews recent advances in economic theories of dictatorships and their lessons for the...
We model growth of dictatorships facing each period an endogenous probability of "political catastro...
This paper analyses the experience of 83 countries from the period of 1950 - 2004 and addresses the ...
This paper explores whether the probability of being punished after losing power leads dictators to ...
This paper analyses the survival of four different growth regimes conditional on political regime tr...
The recent revival of authoritarianism and worldwide losses in democratic quality merit a reassessme...
In this paper we show that in highly unequal societies, different societal groups may support a rent...
Non-democratic regimes vary in the degree to which domestic groups threaten their rule and the exten...
This paper explores conditions under which dictators comply with a social contract. We assume societ...
Since the recent emphasis on institutions for overall economic development of the countries, t...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...