This study empirically investigates the effects of political and economic liberalization on growth volatility using a difference-in-difference method for a sample of 158 countries over the 1970-2005 period. The results show that, when examined separately, economic liberalization leads to a significant reduction in volatility while democratization is not followed by a decrease in growth volatility. For countries that undertake only one liberalization, opening up the economy to international trade reduces volatility in growth; becoming a democracy, on the other hand, seems to increase macroeconomic instability. For countries that implement both political and economic liberalizations, no statistically significant effect on volatility is detect...
This paper analyzes the inter-relations between economic and political processes during transition i...
There exists convincing evidence that democratic countries are less volatile. This conclusion is usu...
This is a study of 42 developing countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America in which we first exami...
This paper studies empirically the effects of and the interactions amongst economic and political li...
We examine the effect of political 'institutions' on economic growth volatility, using data from mor...
This paper revisits the relation between democracy, liberalization, and prosperity in transition cou...
We examine whether the type of political regime, regime changes, and economic liberalization are rel...
This paper empirically surveys the actual links between financial liberalization and economic growth...
This paper challenges cross-sectional findings that democratic institutions have a negligible direct...
There exists convincing evidence that democratic countries are less volatile. This conclusion is usu...
The focus of this paper was to empirically analyze the impacts of economic liberalization on the lib...
The development of international trade can provide the ground for economic growth of a country. In t...
One research path has been to see whether the type of political regime, namely a democratic versus a...
Does democracy promote economic development? We review recent attempts to address this question, whi...
This paper analyzes the inter-relations between economic and political processes during transition i...
There exists convincing evidence that democratic countries are less volatile. This conclusion is usu...
This is a study of 42 developing countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America in which we first exami...
This paper studies empirically the effects of and the interactions amongst economic and political li...
We examine the effect of political 'institutions' on economic growth volatility, using data from mor...
This paper revisits the relation between democracy, liberalization, and prosperity in transition cou...
We examine whether the type of political regime, regime changes, and economic liberalization are rel...
This paper empirically surveys the actual links between financial liberalization and economic growth...
This paper challenges cross-sectional findings that democratic institutions have a negligible direct...
There exists convincing evidence that democratic countries are less volatile. This conclusion is usu...
The focus of this paper was to empirically analyze the impacts of economic liberalization on the lib...
The development of international trade can provide the ground for economic growth of a country. In t...
One research path has been to see whether the type of political regime, namely a democratic versus a...
Does democracy promote economic development? We review recent attempts to address this question, whi...
This paper analyzes the inter-relations between economic and political processes during transition i...
There exists convincing evidence that democratic countries are less volatile. This conclusion is usu...
This is a study of 42 developing countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America in which we first exami...