Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America: Essays in Policy, History, and Political Economy
Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America offers a new contribution to the literature on institutions and growth through the analysis of historical cases of institutional change and economic growth in Latin America in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America: Essays in Policy, History, and Political Economy
Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America offers a new contribution to the literature on institutions and growth through the analysis of historical cases of institutional change and economic growth in Latin America in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America: Essays in Policy, History, and Political Economy

Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America: Essays in Policy, History, and Political Economy

by Stephen Haber
Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America: Essays in Policy, History, and Political Economy

Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America: Essays in Policy, History, and Political Economy

by Stephen Haber

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Overview

Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America offers a new contribution to the literature on institutions and growth through the analysis of historical cases of institutional change and economic growth in Latin America in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780817996666
Publisher: Hoover Institution Press
Publication date: 11/01/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 294
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Stephen Haber is the Peter and Helen Bing Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is also the A.A. and Jeanne Welch Milligan Professor in the School of Humanities and Science and director of the Social Science History Institute at Stanford University.

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Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America

Essays in Policy, History, and Political Economy


By Stephen Haber

Hoover Institution Press

Copyright © 2000 Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-8179-9666-6



CHAPTER 1

Stephen Haber


Introduction: Institutional Change, Economic Growth, and Economic History


There has been a revolution in the social sciences in recent years emanating from the study of institutions in the process of economic growth. Institutions in this context are understood as the laws, rules, and informal agreements within societies that both permit and bound economic or other types of social behavior. They are not the organizations that societies are composed of (the banks, churches, factories, governments) but are the sets of rules that govern how those organizations work.

The New Institutionalism or New Institutional Economics, as the approach is alternately called, argues that economic growth is the outcome of productivity increases that are brought about by the efficient allocation of factors of production through smoothly functioning firms and markets. All things being equal, societies that create institutions that clearly specify and enforce private property rights, ease the formulation and enforcement of contracts, limit the ability of governments to intervene in the economy for their own short-term advantage, and generally support the operation of free markets will generate more rapid rates of economic growth than those that do not.

The New Institutionalism builds on a long tradition in economic theory and has an impressive theoretical edifice that is widely influential among both scholars and policymakers. Indeed, the New Institutionalism has been particularly influential among those who are designing policies for the transitional economies of Eastern Europe and Latin America. Nowhere is this perhaps more true than at the World Bank, whose recent World Development Reports stress the importance of designing institutions that will promote economic growth.

There are essentially three variants in the literature on institutions and growth. One variant focuses on the institutions that govern the operation of markets. This strand of the literature focuses on how changes in institutions make credible commitments possible, property rights more secure, and contracts enforceable, thereby lowering transactions costs and increasing the range of exchanges that are mediated through the market. This, in turn, increases allocative efficiency and encourages entrepreneurs to adopt longer time horizons, thereby increasing investments in physical and human capital. A second, and related, variant of the New Institutionalist literature focuses on the institutions that limit governments. This body of literature argues that economic growth will be enhanced if governments are constrained in their ability to reduce the property rights or increase the tax burdens faced by economic agents. This strand of the literature therefore focuses on the mechanisms that constrain governments from using their authority to engage in opportunistic behavior in order to satisfy their short-term financial needs at the expense of long-term economic growth. A third variant of the literature focuses on the institutions that affect contracts within firms. Changes in the rules and norms that bound or limit the types and nature of intrafirm contracts, it is argued, have an impact on the ability of firms to engage in organizational or technological innovations that increase productivity.

Despite its recent popularity, the New Institutionalism has seldom been subjected to systematic and direct tests of consistency with evidence. The New Institutionalism is advanced by theorists not as a set of necessary truths but as a set of hypotheses to be tested. Yet, of the three types of confirmatory logics employed to sustain truth claims in the social sciences (formal theory, the historical record, and econometric or statistical hypothesis testing), the New Institutionalism rests primarily on only one, theory. The success of the approach, as well as the relevance of its policy implications, will ultimately depend, however, on its ability to explain actual economic outcomes, not just theoretical ones.

Social scientists are therefore confronted by a peculiar problem: there is widespread agreement that institutions matter — and matter a great deal — in the process of economic growth. Yet they are simultaneously unsure to what degree institutions affect growth and which particular institutional arrangements are crucial (and which are merely incidental) to economic performance. They therefore have difficulty, as a practical and policy matter, separating the independent impact of particular institutional changes from the effects of other economic transformations.

Unfortunately, operationalizing the testable hypotheses of New Institutional Theory using either the historical record or econometric analysis has proven elusive. Four factors have hampered research linking theory and the historical record. First, most empirical studies in the New Institutionalism do not, in fact, attempt to test or refine the theory against the past record of economic performance. Rather, they attempt to apply the theory as a metaphorical means to better understand the historical record of economic growth. One potential outcome of this type of research strategy can be the misapplication of theory, or the fitting of history to the theory, rather than the other way around.

The second factor limiting the attempt to assess the fit between theory and the historical record is that the historical case studies selected for analysis are weak and partial tests. Scholars have typically chosen cases for analysis in which putatively more-efficient institutions produced faster economic growth. Yet if positive institutional innovations (more-secure property rights, credible commitments by governments to not expropriate private assets, and the like) exert a positive influence on economic growth, then it should also follow that negative institutional changes (such as revolutions that make property rights less secure, the rise of predatory states, or government regulations that distort markets) should produce slow or negative rates of economic growth. The literature to date, however, has not tended to address these types of cases in a systematic fashion.

Third, most of the literature has looked at economies in which institutional change proceeded gradually. The incremental nature of institutional change in these economies, coupled with the fact that there are often multiple institutions undergoing such incremental changes at any one time, means that it is difficult, if not impossible, to pinpoint particular institutional reforms that have been crucial for economic growth. This problem is accentuated by a fourth factor: most of the work done to date has focused on economies that have had long histories of well-developed markets. In these economies, the market has anticipated institutional changes, meaning that it is extremely difficult to demonstrate the effects of any particular institutional reform. Indeed, in economies in which there are well-developed markets, an endogeneity may exist between the market and institutional development; markets as they become more efficient may affect the process of institutional development, which, in turn, feeds back into markets, and so on.

These problems are amplified when scholars attempt to move beyond stylized historical correlations by developing formalized econometric or statistical tests of the relationship between institutional change and economic growth. Not only do all of the problems of endogeneity and selection bias again emerge, but scholars are confronted by the numerous technical difficulties associated with tying any particular change in institutions to an acceleration in productivity and income growth.

Some scholars, most notably Robert Barro and Alberto Alesina, have attempted to demonstrate the connections between the political or institutional features of societies and the growth of their economies through cross-country growth regressions. The results of these exercises, however, have been inconclusive. First, this body of literature offers no theoretical model of how institutions and growth interact; it is a purely inductive exercise in growth accounting. Second, econometric considerations make these estimates dubious. The statistical results of growth accounting regressions tend to be highly sensitive to the number of observations, the choice of cases, and the specification of the regressions. Third, there are serious problems of measurement error and misspecification of instrumental variables. The instruments we have to measure the institutional or political features of societies are poorly developed. Barro, for example, employs the number of revolutions and coups per year and the number of political assassinations per million population as measures of political instability and then goes on to "interpret [these] variables as adverse influences on property rights." Finally, there are fundamental concerns about the stability of the statistical relationship between economic and political variables and about the ability of capturing the complex interaction of political and economic institutions through any single linear equation. In situations in which institutions are rapidly changing, the specification itself may no longer hold. This can be a serious problem because, in the pooling of countries with different relationships between politics and economics, it may only require a subset of unstable countries within a larger data set to cause a misspecification in the estimated cross-country equations. In short, on both theoretical and econometric grounds, growth accounting exercises are unlikely ever to produce the level of certainty that most social scientists would find compelling.

In recent years, economists and political scientists interested in the systematic analysis of institutional change and historians of Latin America who have embraced the quantitative and systematic methods of the social sciences have begun a series of collaborative research programs designed specifically to create the kind of basic research that ultimately will be necessary to test and refine New Institutional Theory. They have proceeded from the notion that the most unambiguous results in institutional analysis are to be found in those cases where there have been dramatic changes in institutions, where institutions have at times changed in such a way as to reduce property rights, where markets could not anticipate institutional changes, and where there is sufficient quantitative data to measure the productivity consequences of institutional change. In short, they are attempting to employ the history of Latin American economies as a laboratory for empirical research in the New Institutionalism.

This volume reports on the research of one such collaborative research program that took place at the Hoover Institution in February 1998. It offers a contribution to the literature on institutions and growth through the analysis of historical cases of institutional change and economic growth in Latin America in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

To provide the kinds of evidence that most social scientists and policymakers would find compelling, the authors employ three sets of analytic tools: first, the historical approach because the impact of institutional change on economic performance can only be detected over long time periods; second, the methods and approaches of economics because demonstrating that particular institutional reforms had particular effects on market development or firm efficiency requires the careful use of econometric techniques; and third, the methods and tools of modern political science because most formal economic institutions are politically determined. In short, this volume presents not only a set of substantive conclusions about the interaction of particular institutional changes and the economic performance of real world economies but also a methodological framework for the development of similar kinds of research programs.

Our theoretical point of departure is the notion that economic institutions cannot be studied in isolation from the institutions that regulate politics. Economic institutions, and their enforcement and refinement, do not emerge from thin air. They are also not simply the result of demands of interest groups. Rather, they are the result of both interest group demands and the specific features of decision making in the polity, which are themselves governed by institutions. On the one hand, these political institutions include the rules about who has the authority to legislate and enforce the regulations that govern economic activity and what are the legitimate extensions of that authority. On the other hand, these political institutions also specify the way in which a polity might change the rules about who has the authority to regulate and the legitimate extent of regulation. Thus, the study of the origins and consequences of economic institutions also requires that we study the institutions that structure political decision making.

The enactment of regulations and general policies, as output of the political system, affects the scope and action of economic agents. That is, the political system generates sets of laws, regulations, and enforcement mechanisms that serve to both permit and bound economic activity. These laws range from those that affect nearly all economic agents (laws regarding the specification of private property, for example) to those that are specific to particular industries, firms, or classes of workers. Examples would include tariffs on specific products, laws that regulate entry into particular lines of economic activity (the regulations that govern the chartering of banks, for example), or laws that regulate wages and hours for particular occupations. These laws, in turn, have a direct impact on the structure and efficiency of firms and markets.

There is therefore a complex interaction between the institutions that mediate the polity and the economy, and these need to be studied jointly. Working backward, we can specify the relationship in the following way. There are institutions (laws and regulations governing economic activity) that limit the activities of firms and markets. These economic institutions, by virtue of the fact that they are legally codified, are politically created. Indeed, they are often formulated in order to accomplish political ends, such as the distribution of rewards or benefits to a legislator's constituents. Political decision making is, in turn, governed by its own set of institutions that determine the governance structure of a society (rules about who has the authority to enact and enforce economic legislation) and the specific features of decision making within each branch of the government. On the one hand, these institutions serve to delineate a division of labor to perform government tasks. On the other hand, these institutions structure the process by which the constituent branches of the government go about drafting, debating, and enacting particular pieces of legislation. These institutions are themselves bounded by yet another set of institutions that structure the way that the political system can decide to change the rules about decision making. This type of political institution (rules about the rules, so to speak) includes constitutions and constitutional amendments, as well as the judicial review of proposed policies and laws.

The focus on the interaction of political and economic institutions is clearly articulated by William Summerhill in chapter 2 in this volume, "Institutional Determinants of Railroad Subsidy and Regulation in Imperial Brazil." The economy of imperial Brazil (the period 1822–1889, when Brazil was governed by a monarchy) was characterized by low levels of per capita income, slow rates of economic growth, and widespread market failure. Brazilian policymakers were familiar with the institutional innovations that had accounted for the success of the North Atlantic economies: investments in education and human capital; modern property rights in land; patent laws that made it easy for inventors to earn returns from the fruits of their research; commercial legislation that eased the formation of limited liability companies; and laws that facilitated the development of banks and other financial intermediaries. Surprisingly, they were slow to undertake any of these institutional innovations, and when they did so, the nature of decision making in the Brazilian polity gave rise to policies that strongly departed from the ideal.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Political Institutions and Economic Growth in Latin America by Stephen Haber. Copyright © 2000 Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. Excerpted by permission of Hoover Institution Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments,
Contributors,
1 Introduction: Institutional Change, Economic Growth, and Economic History Stephen Haber,
2 Institutional Determinants of Railroad Subsidy and Regulation in Imperial Brazil William R. Summerhill,
3 The Political Economy of Financial Market Regulation and Industrial Productivity Growth in Brazil, 1866–1934 Stephen Haber,
4 Latin America and Foreign Capital in the Twentieth Century: Economics, Politics, and Institutional Change Alan M. Taylor,
5 Schooling, Suffrage, and the Persistence of Inequality in the Americas, 1800–1945 Elisa Mariscal and Kenneth L. Sokoloff,
6 Privately and Publicly Induced Institutional Change: Observations from Cuban Cane Contracting, 1880–1936 Alan Dye,
7 Concluding Remarks: The Emerging New Economic History of Latin America Douglass C. North and Barry R. Weingast,
Index,

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