Endogenous Democratization
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Abstract
The authors show that economic development increases the probability that a country will undergo a transition to democracy. These results contradict the finding of Przeworski and his associates, that development causes democracy to last but not to come into existence in the first place. By dealing adequately with problems of sample selection and model specification, the authors discover that economic growth does cause nondemocracies to democratize. They show that the effect of economic development on the probability of a transition to democracy in the hundred years between the mid-nineteenth century and World War II was substantial, indeed, even stronger than its effect on democratic stability. They also show…
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916
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- FWCI
- 43.77
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- 100%
- References
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Democratization
- Dictatorship
- Democracy
- Per capita
- Per capita income
- Economics
- Development economics
- Political science
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