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Regime Type and Economic Development By James Mazol.

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Presentation on theme: "Regime Type and Economic Development By James Mazol."— Presentation transcript:

1 Regime Type and Economic Development By James Mazol

2 Research Question and Background  Are authoritarian governments better than democracies at promoting economic development?  Economic Development and Political Legitimacy – Seymour Martin Lipset (1959)  Autocracies superior in organizing and employing resources  Less fearful of public opinion  Overall more efficient  Samuel Huntington’s Theory of a “Directing Agent” (1968)  Better and more willing “enforcers”  East Asian “Tigers” and China

3 Hypotheses  On average, democracies will be better than autocracies at promoting economic development  As a country’s corruption level decreases, economic development will increase  As a country’s level of business regulation increases, economic development will decrease

4 Independent Variable  Regime Type: Democracy or Autocracy  Source: Freedom House, Freedom in the World Index 2006  120 electoral democracies  45 autocracies  Received 6 or 7 in Political Rights ranking  Freedom House designates 6 or below as autocratic government

5 Dependent Variable  Components of Economic Development  Overall wealth, growth, distribution, level of development  Growth – Real GDP growth %, CIA World Factbook, 2006  Wealth – GDP/capita, International Monetary Fund Index, 2006  Distribution – Gini Coefficient, UN Human Development Report, 2006  Development Level – Development List, Triennial Review of UNCTAD (Conference on Trade and Development)  50 countries are classified as Least Developed Countries (LDC)  Lowest indicators of socioeconomic development with the lowest Human Development Index ratings of all the countries in the world

6 Data Analysis – Comparison of Means  Gini – Nearly the same  Democracies = 41.02  Autocracies = 39.06  Growth – Autocracies 1/3 higher  Democracies = 4.6%  Autocracies = 6.96%  GDP – Democracies have double the wealth  Democracies = $12,978  Autocracies = $6380

7 Data Analysis

8 Regime type and mean GDP per capita

9 Regime type and GDP growth

10 Regime type and Gini

11 How much influence does regime type have?  Evidence does not support hypothesis  GDP and Growth statistically significant  Gini not statistically significant  Eta Square  GDP (p/capita) -.064  Gini -.005  Growth -.074

12 Does Democracy Lead to a More Developed Country?

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14 Data Analysis  17 Democracies are LDCs – 14.2%  15 Autocracies are LDCs – 33.3%  Small Chi-Square, statistically significant  Cramer’s V -.216 indicates strong relationship  LDC definition includes more than just economic development

15 Other factors that may influence development  Business Regulation – World Bank, Doing Business Report, 2006  Starting a business index  Countries ranked individually 1-172, with 172 the hardest  Time, cost, K investment  Good indicator of level of overall regulation of business  Corruption – Transparency International, Corruption Perceptions Index, 2006  Draw on expert opinion surveys  1-10 ranking, with 10 = extremely low levels of government corruption

16 Corruption Correlations

17 Pearson’s R Results  GDP p/capita =.873 – Very strong positive relationship  R square =.76  GDP growth rate = -.227 – Weak negative relationship  R square =.05  Gini Coefficient = -.342 – Moderate negative relationship  R square =.12  All significant at.01 level

18 Interpreting Data  Evidence partially supports hypothesis  Low levels of corruption lead to wealth, very strong relationship  Cannot say it is a major factor of development because of moderate negative relationship with Gini

19 Regression Analysis

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22 Regulation Correlations

23 Pearson’s R results  Gini Coefficient =.340 – moderate positive relationship  R square -.12  GDP growth =.119 – Negligible relationship  R square -.01  GDP p/capita = -.542 – strong negative relationship  R square –.29

24 Regression Analysis

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27 Interpreting Data  Same conclusion as corruption  Major factor in wealth creation but not a definitive factor in development  Moderate positive relationship with Gini, that is significant  As countries level of corruption and business regulation decrease the level of wealth will increase

28 Final Conclusions  No evidence that either regime type is better at promoting economic development  Regime type not relatively important as a factor  Democracies with low levels of corruption and business regulations will tend to be wealthy


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