bookThe MIT Press eBooksAug 15, 2003Closed access

The Economic Effects of Constitutions

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Abstract

The authors of The Economic Effects of Constitutions use econometric tools to study what they call the "missing link" between constitutional systems and economic policy; the book is an uncompromisingly empirical sequel to their previous theoretical analysis of economic policy. Taking recent theoretical work as a point of departure, they ask which theoretical findings are supported and which are contradicted by the facts. The results are based on comparisons of political institutions across countries or time, in a large sample of contemporary democracies. They find that presidential/parliamentary and majoritarian/proportional dichotomies influence several economic variables: presidential regimes induce smaller…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Presidential system
  • Politics
  • Language change
  • Dichotomy
  • Government (linguistics)
  • Economics
  • Political science
  • Public economics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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