Developing country leaders typically resemble proprietors more than benevolent social planners, i.e., they are powerful individuals pursuing their own interests while they remain in power. We model growth in a 'proprietary economy" facing each period an endogenous probability of 'political catastrophe" that would hurt foreign investors and extinguish the proprietor's wealth extraction ability. We develop a model in which domestic capital exhibits a bifurcation point determining economic growth or shrink,9,ge. With low initial domestic capital the proprietor plunders the country's resources and the economy shrinks, even when shrinkage is not socially optimal. With high initial domestic capital the economy grows faster than is socially op...
This article shows that multiple growth paths may occurin a politico-economic model of endogenous gr...
Using data for 160 countries for the period 1963-2001, this paper examines the short-run relationshi...
We argue that economic collapses can result from the adoption by political actors of strategies that...
We model growth of dictatorships facing each period an endogenous probability of "political catastro...
In this paper, we address two questions: (i) Why do developing countries with the highest growth rat...
We propose a tractable variant of the open economy neoclassical growth model that emphasizes politic...
Some autocracies have sustained high economic growth for many decades; others have stagnated at low ...
The purpose of this paper is to empirically determine the effects of political instability on econom...
This paper models the influence of political instability on long-term economic growth. We consider t...
We analyze a game between citizens and governments, whose type (benevolent or predatory) is unknown ...
This work is tending to use theoretical model (economic dynamic model), trying to explain the effect...
We analyze a game between citizens and governments, whose type (benevolent or predatory) is unknown ...
This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expressed ...
We consider a simple political-economic model where capitalist investment is constrained by the gove...
This paper investigates the problem of sustaining economic growth, viewed from the perspective of ho...
This article shows that multiple growth paths may occurin a politico-economic model of endogenous gr...
Using data for 160 countries for the period 1963-2001, this paper examines the short-run relationshi...
We argue that economic collapses can result from the adoption by political actors of strategies that...
We model growth of dictatorships facing each period an endogenous probability of "political catastro...
In this paper, we address two questions: (i) Why do developing countries with the highest growth rat...
We propose a tractable variant of the open economy neoclassical growth model that emphasizes politic...
Some autocracies have sustained high economic growth for many decades; others have stagnated at low ...
The purpose of this paper is to empirically determine the effects of political instability on econom...
This paper models the influence of political instability on long-term economic growth. We consider t...
We analyze a game between citizens and governments, whose type (benevolent or predatory) is unknown ...
This work is tending to use theoretical model (economic dynamic model), trying to explain the effect...
We analyze a game between citizens and governments, whose type (benevolent or predatory) is unknown ...
This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expressed ...
We consider a simple political-economic model where capitalist investment is constrained by the gove...
This paper investigates the problem of sustaining economic growth, viewed from the perspective of ho...
This article shows that multiple growth paths may occurin a politico-economic model of endogenous gr...
Using data for 160 countries for the period 1963-2001, this paper examines the short-run relationshi...
We argue that economic collapses can result from the adoption by political actors of strategies that...