This paper presents an attempt to quantify institutional changes and examine the respective effects of de jure and de facto political institutions on the path of long-run economic growth and development for a large panel of countries in the period 1810–2000. Using factor analysis, latent indices of de jure and de facto political institutions are constructed by exploiting several existing institutional datasets. The empirical evidence consistently suggests that societies with more extractive political institutions in Latin America, South Asia, Middle East and Eastern Europe have achieved systematically slower long-run economic growth and failed to catch-up with the West. The evidence confirms the primacy of de facto institutional differences...
This study examines the relationship between institutions and economic growth at various stages of e...
Much of the empirical work and the concep-tual discussion of the impact of institutions on economic ...
In this paper we argue the case for greater exploitation of synergies between research on specific i...
In the comparative political economy literature, recent work has focused on the exogenous determinan...
This paper analyzes the effects of institutions on economic development, and focuses on separating p...
This chapter describes how institutional quality can be measured, quantifies the correlation between...
This chapter describes how institutional quality can be measured, quantifies the correlation between...
This dissertation argues that work in the New Institutional Economics has yet to live up to its prom...
This paper tests the hypothesis that institutional capabilities have a positive effect on economic d...
Are institutions a deep cause of economic growth? This paper tries to answer this question in a nove...
In this paper we use the components of the PolityIV project’s polity2 and Vanhanen’s Index of Democr...
This thesis is an empirical investigation examining the impact of state development and institutiona...
Traditional economic growth regressions are not adequate to identify the role of political instituti...
We study the role of institutional development as a causal mechanism of history affecting current ec...
The notion that institutions matter for long-run growth and development can scarcely be disputed. It...
This study examines the relationship between institutions and economic growth at various stages of e...
Much of the empirical work and the concep-tual discussion of the impact of institutions on economic ...
In this paper we argue the case for greater exploitation of synergies between research on specific i...
In the comparative political economy literature, recent work has focused on the exogenous determinan...
This paper analyzes the effects of institutions on economic development, and focuses on separating p...
This chapter describes how institutional quality can be measured, quantifies the correlation between...
This chapter describes how institutional quality can be measured, quantifies the correlation between...
This dissertation argues that work in the New Institutional Economics has yet to live up to its prom...
This paper tests the hypothesis that institutional capabilities have a positive effect on economic d...
Are institutions a deep cause of economic growth? This paper tries to answer this question in a nove...
In this paper we use the components of the PolityIV project’s polity2 and Vanhanen’s Index of Democr...
This thesis is an empirical investigation examining the impact of state development and institutiona...
Traditional economic growth regressions are not adequate to identify the role of political instituti...
We study the role of institutional development as a causal mechanism of history affecting current ec...
The notion that institutions matter for long-run growth and development can scarcely be disputed. It...
This study examines the relationship between institutions and economic growth at various stages of e...
Much of the empirical work and the concep-tual discussion of the impact of institutions on economic ...
In this paper we argue the case for greater exploitation of synergies between research on specific i...