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Democracy and economic growth in an interdependent world

Democracy and economic growth in an interdependent world
Democracy and economic growth in an interdependent world
We model dynamic interdependence in cross-country economic growth processes by allowing it to vary according to democratic distance among economies. Stochastic distributional dynamics and temporal effects of democracy on economic growth are studied, and spatial variation in economic growth is explored. Among important results, democratic poverty trap is found to exist indicating the possibility of persistence of (un)stable democratic equilibria at different levels of democracy. Our cross-sectional regression evinces that democracy has exerted significant growth-enhancing effect and that the democratic distribution has steadily shifted locus from low-level to high-level equilibrium. Our spatial analysis of democracy-economic growth nexus provide evidence of significant dynamic spatial autocorrelation and complementarity among countries' growth processes. Finally, it is demonstrated that the relevance of geographical proximity in facilitating interdependence in economic growth is overshadowed by relational proximity
0965-7576
733-749
Diebolt, Claude
ab734d38-cf64-44a9-9144-cf7ccdb621ed
Mishra, Tapas
218ef618-6b3e-471b-a686-15460da145e0
Ouattara, Bazoumana
72d3d519-d1ff-4c19-b1a7-eef1e0e034d0
Parhi, Mamata
5e489f1d-9fe0-44b3-8027-bfa3ec6bfbd4
Diebolt, Claude
ab734d38-cf64-44a9-9144-cf7ccdb621ed
Mishra, Tapas
218ef618-6b3e-471b-a686-15460da145e0
Ouattara, Bazoumana
72d3d519-d1ff-4c19-b1a7-eef1e0e034d0
Parhi, Mamata
5e489f1d-9fe0-44b3-8027-bfa3ec6bfbd4

Diebolt, Claude, Mishra, Tapas, Ouattara, Bazoumana and Parhi, Mamata (2013) Democracy and economic growth in an interdependent world. Review of International Economics, 21 (4), 733-749. (doi:10.1111/roie.12067).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We model dynamic interdependence in cross-country economic growth processes by allowing it to vary according to democratic distance among economies. Stochastic distributional dynamics and temporal effects of democracy on economic growth are studied, and spatial variation in economic growth is explored. Among important results, democratic poverty trap is found to exist indicating the possibility of persistence of (un)stable democratic equilibria at different levels of democracy. Our cross-sectional regression evinces that democracy has exerted significant growth-enhancing effect and that the democratic distribution has steadily shifted locus from low-level to high-level equilibrium. Our spatial analysis of democracy-economic growth nexus provide evidence of significant dynamic spatial autocorrelation and complementarity among countries' growth processes. Finally, it is demonstrated that the relevance of geographical proximity in facilitating interdependence in economic growth is overshadowed by relational proximity

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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 August 2013
Organisations: Southampton Business School

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 380204
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380204
ISSN: 0965-7576
PURE UUID: c07c7269-1ca9-40f3-9af3-33b51bbccd84
ORCID for Tapas Mishra: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6902-2326

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Date deposited: 04 Sep 2015 13:07
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:51

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Contributors

Author: Claude Diebolt
Author: Tapas Mishra ORCID iD
Author: Bazoumana Ouattara
Author: Mamata Parhi

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