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The Economic Growth Effect of Constitutions Revisited Presentation for Political Economics Reading Group 20/4 2009 Carl Henrik Knutsen Problem questions and main results Does form of government (presidentialism vs parliamentarism) affect growth in GDP per capita? Does electoral system (plural-majoritarian vs proportional representation) affect growth in GDP per capita? Main empirical results: Form of government does not seem to have any systematic effect PR (and semi-PR) systems affect growth positively when compared to plural-majoritarian Structure paper Introduction Theoretical survey form of government and growth Theoretical survey electoral rules and growth Including earlier empirical results Data and empirical analysis Including earlier empirical results OLS with PCSE, RE, FE Matching 2SLS Conclusion Motivation Real world importance: Constitutional engineering and reengineering. Historically, much debate on political consequences Some examples US constitution, Federalist Papers, fear of tyranny and power concentration Presidentialism in Latin America, political gridlock and breakdown The Weimar Republic, PR and the triumph of Hitler Norway, minority governments, “chaos” and the need for plurality rules? Economic consequences? Not well understood (historically) Lack of good models, but also: multiple mechanisms and aggregation Person and Tabellini’s research program Presidentialism, parliamentarism and growth Checks and balances, more veto players under presidentialism Other arguments in favor of parliamentarism (+) reduces opportunity for predatory behavior (e.g. expropriation) (?) Reduces size of the public sector (-) rigidity and lack of reform (-) special interests and side payments to veto players Party discipline, party strength and coordination under parliamentarism; the vote of confidence. Personification of politics under presidentialism Earlier studies: +parliamentarism: Gerring et al (2009), Persson (2005) +parl.: (in low quality democracies only) P&T (2003) +pres.: P&T (2006) Electoral systems and growth Plurality rules and accountability (relation seats and votes, fewer coallition governments, smaller districts, individual candidate voting) PR and autonomy of politicians from narrow interest groups (pork barrel, protectionism, property rights protection) PR and stability/credibility of policy (changes in seats and alternation of government, coallition governments) Earlier empirical studies: P&T (2003 and 2006), Persson 2005. +effect from PR on trade liberalization, property rights and good economic institutions, but effect on growth not robust Data Dep. variable: GDP per capita growth from Maddison (2006) Form of govt and electoral rules from Schjølset (2008) Controls: Federalism, log GDP pc, log population, log regime duration, degree of democracy, ethnic fractionalization, colonizer, region, plurality religion, fraction English and other major European language speakers, latitude, Frankel-Romer trade instrument, decade dummies Time frame: 1820-2002 Empirical analysis Main result: 1% (+) extra GDP per capita growth from PR, no effect from form of government. Significant effect from PR (and semi-PR), except for 2SLS. OLS with PCSE Robustness checks, countries Presidentialism and negative effect in temporally constrained sample RE and FE, constitutional inertia and inference Matching 2SLS (large standard errors, point estimates, hausman tests) Conclusion No effect from form of government The “gentler, milder form of democracy” related to PR rules is not only better for representation of diverse groups in politics and congruence between government and median voter, but also for economic growth.