Dietz Vollrath at the Growth Economics Blog has a three part series on problems with the the empirical institutions and growth literature. If you’re a development economist or political economy person you should read these posts, and follow the blog. (It’s probably the best out there on economic growth, because–and in spite of–the fact it dives into the weeds once in a while.)
If you’ve immersed yourself in the literature you might not hear a lot new from Vollrath, but I am willing to bet you will hear at least a little new. I learned a good deal.
The empirical institutions and growth literature he doesn’t review is the largely historical and non-quantitative one. I find it more compelling and rich than the statistical literature, but they’re nice complements.
This has made me want to write up my notes and impressions on the literature, and how I teach it. Given that I don’t have the time, a few quick thoughts and pointers:
- The institutions literature has focused too much on constraints and not on capacity. Constraints on power matter a lot. But the capacity of the state to get things done is equally or more important (e.g. collecting taxes, waging war, delivering justice and other services). In a statistical sense, you could say there’s an omitted variable problem–when we see constraints mattering it is actually capturing the effect of both constraints and capacity. But there’s actually a deeper problem of these being aspects of political development that have different determinants, and may feed off of one another.
- You might argue a third dimension of institutions is the political machinery that gets developed to answer the question “Who decides?”. And re-answer it every day without a destructive conflict or tumultuous turnover of power. All the apparatus that helps elites and groups bargain and make and hold agreements, have a political conversation and compete for power more or less peacefully. This kind of political development has a lot in common with “constraints” and “capacity”, but it’s distinct. “How to manage peaceful political transitions as the relative power of different interest groups change?” is a really, really, fundamental question a society has to answer to have persistent economic growth.
- The slightly less-read stuff that should be more read, in my opinion:
- North, Wallis and Weingast, either their book or this summary paper
- Tim Besley and Torsten Persson’s work on state capacity (one example). If there is a less technical piece many people would be happy for the pointer (and I could use it in my undergrad and masters classes).
- Some of the small-sample comparative case study work in Latin America, such as Jeffrey Paige or James Mahoney. most economists only read Engerman and Sokoloff.
- There’s a huge comparative politics literature (i.e. historical, comparative case studies). One of the nicer, more concise summaries is in John Ishiyama’s short textbook. He’s also the APSR editor at the moment. My master’s class syllabus has more of this in the “recommended readings”
- There’s a growing empirical micro literature that uses subnational or individual data to show how important are things like social norms, rules, decision-making processes, and all the other things we think of as “institutions” at the micro level. A slightly dated and incomplete set are buried in my PhD syllabus for the political science/sustainable development students. One of the takeaways that is hard to reconcile with the macro literature is that these local institutions appear to be quite malleable in the short term. How do we understand persistence at the macro level then?
Hat tip to the Development Impact blog for reminding me about this series. In my opinion it’s the other essential blog to follow in development economics. 2 of my 4 email subscriptions to blogs are the two mentioned in this post, since I don’t want to miss one.
What is missing is a blog that introduces this audience to comparative politics and political development. The Why Nations Fail blog comes closest, and often has must read posts.
62 Responses
RT @fp2p: Useful survey of institutions and growth literature from @cblatts http://t.co/ER2jpCXpzb
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? – Chris Blattman http://t.co/SPVxqkScsv
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/zXu24vT4dT
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature?: Dietz Vollrath at the Growth Economics Blog has a t… http://t.co/4myiLqorOM
This is a good one, RT “@cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/iSNjuJcTa5”
Great 3 part review of institutions lit. from @DietzVollrath: https://t.co/LqbxX9p12r with nice riposte from @cblatts http://t.co/nXEPU8M7ZQ
RT @fp2p: Useful survey of institutions and growth literature from @cblatts http://t.co/ER2jpCXpzb
RT @fp2p: Useful survey of institutions and growth literature from @cblatts http://t.co/ER2jpCXpzb
Useful survey of institutions and growth literature from @cblatts http://t.co/ER2jpCXpzb
“Should we believe the institutions and growth literature?” http://t.co/82u6vX2kdZ
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd
Thoughtful post from @cblatts on institutions/growth http://t.co/a7HX9N6cbJ , following @DietzVollrath’s series https://t.co/1VrBh2nC1s
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd
Economists! @patsignoret! @favillagomez! RT @MarkThoma: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/YIk4Ip8egq
Very interesting post today. With respect to your point that the work on institutions and growth has been focused too much on constraints, and not capacity, I make a similar argument here: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/isqu.12122/abstract
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/38XLhIDXZD
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd
RT @leathaleconomic: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/S9jZHdhcQw
RT @davdittrich: RT @leathaleconomic: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/yWEphVyBN0
RT @leathaleconomic: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/yWEphVyBN0
RT @leathaleconomic: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/S9jZHdhcQw
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
@GarettJones @cblatts Agreed. Would also point out new econ history work on how state building over the long-run occurred in Europe.
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/nGUuZB25m3 @cblatts
RT @pseudoerasmus: From @DietzVollrath 4-part Sceptic’s Guide to Institutions http://t.co/xV0Wa7lMDt
informative response from @cblatts ht…
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/S9jZHdhcQw
@RajaKorman Yeah thats a good point, different in English @cblatts
@cblatts @ewatterbjork Thanks.one of the reasons I hate this AR stuff is the use of the word “nations” when “countries” would be just fine.
RT @martin_anota: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? (Chris Blattman) http://t.co/KHLpEt4Li1
@cblatts @MarkKoyama YES, also think the Putterman/Weil/Wacziarg/Spolaore/Galor/Easterly etc. work on deep history deserves extra attention
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? See @cblatts and @DietzVollrath take: http://t.co/VTmQSJ9BKg
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/1L5FXoMGeI via @chrisblattman
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
Acemoglu and Robinson, which may be the type of non quantitive and more historical literature you prefer, distinguish between inclusive and extractive political institutions and also between inclusive and extractive economic institutions. They show the political leads to the economic. This seems to be your point 3. Constraints and capacity don’t matter too much if 3 isn’t dealt with first. You can have the best funded and most capable civil servants in the world but if the elite say no then it is no that happens.
RT @cblatts: What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
What the institutions and growth literature is missing http://t.co/ulGuvH0gqy
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd
RT @pseudoerasmus: From @DietzVollrath 4-part Sceptic’s Guide to Institutions http://t.co/xV0Wa7lMDt
informative response from @cblatts ht…
RT @MarkThoma: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? – Chris Blattman http://t.co/RDEQGAC80c
From @DietzVollrath 4-part Sceptic’s Guide to Institutions http://t.co/xV0Wa7lMDt
informative response from @cblatts http://t.co/AIu9vLgQtP
@cblatts This is in Spanish but its the closest to a blog on comparative politics and political development http://t.co/2v4XlotxMY
For less technical B&P, maybe Chapter 1 of Pillars of Prosperity? Also it is free from the publisher: http://press.princeton.edu/titles/9624.html
Nice post by @cblatts on the institutions literature. Surprised he doesn’t mention the new Fukuyama’s books though. http://t.co/4HyG1olRDL
RT @MarkThoma: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? – Chris Blattman http://t.co/RDEQGAC80c
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? – Chris Blattman http://t.co/Kz9Dr1T6wy
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? (Chris Blattman) http://t.co/KHLpEt4Li1
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd
RT @MarkThoma: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? – Chris Blattman http://t.co/RDEQGAC80c
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd
Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? – Chris Blattman http://t.co/RDEQGAC80c
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd
RT @cblatts: Should we believe the institutions and growth literature? http://t.co/9NEVlYRuOd