Title: Democracy, Media and Corruption
1Democracy, Media and Corruption
- Democracy ? corruption?
- Olson 1993
- Clague, Keefer, Knack, and Olson 1996
- Keefer 2007
- Free press ? corruption?
- Adsera, Boix, and Payne 2003
2Olson 1993
- Modern classic in theoretical politics
- Echoes of The Logic of Collective Action 1965
- Individuals free ride
- Developed further in Power and Prosperity 2000
- Anarchy (roving bandit) lt Tyranny (stationary
bandit) lt Democracy (majority government)
3Clague, Keefer, Knack, and Olson 1996
- Pioneering and most quoted empirical articles on
the impact of political institutions - Controversial points
- Structure
- Simple but powerful Olsons theory
- World Bank economists empirical methods
4Keefer 2007
- Most recent contributions to the debate
- Encompassing empirical analysis of differences
within democracies - Several dimensions of Quality of Government
- Corruption
- Provision of Private Goods
- Provision of Public Goods
5Adsera, Boix, and Payne 2003
- Important contribution to the debate on Causes of
Good Government - Theory with mechanisms linking Democracy, Free
Press and Corruption - Original empirical analysis cross-country and
within-country variation
6Olson 1993
- Are all polities built by means of force and
coercion? - no one has ever found a large society that
obtained a peaceful order or other public goods
through an agreement among the individuals in the
society.
7Stationary bandits gt Roving bandits ?
- Why should warlords, who were stationary bandits
continuously stealing from a given group of
victims, be preferred, by those victims, to
roving bandits who soon departed?
8monopoly of theft gt uncoordinated competitive
theft
- "the first blessing of the invisible hand the
rational, self-interested leader of a band of
roving bandits is led, as though by an invisible
hand, to settle down, wear a crown, and replace
anarchy with government. The gigantic increase in
output that normally arises from the provision of
a peaceful order and other public goods gives the
stationary bandit a far larger take than he could
obtain without providing government.
9Democratic rulers gt Dictators
- Not because democrat incumbents are more
benevolent - Assumption taxes ? distort incentives ? reduces
income so much that tax collections fall - Dictators establish a revenue-maximizing tax
- Democrat rulers tax less the majority always has
a higher stake at the growth of the national
economy - Underlying idea the broadest the interests
represented in government (majority gt oligarchy gt
dictator), the more the government will take into
account the social costs of redistributions
10But, if you are unlucky, and have a dictator
- Dynastic Monarchies gt Standard Dictators
- Why?
- Any other critical comment to Olsons theory?
11Why do democracies emerge?
- If autocrat rulers obtain more revenue than
democratic ones - why do not those rebel leaders who overthrow a
ruler always establish another autocracy instead
of a democracy?
12Great works, great last sentences
- The moral appeal of democracy is now almost
universally appreciated, but its economic
advantages are scarcely understood.
13Clague, Keefer, Knack, and Olson1996
- Simple but powerful Olsons theory World Bank
economists empirical quantitative methods - What matters for protection of PPRR is not
Democracy vs. Dictatorship, but Short vs. Long
Time Horizons - But, at the same time, WHY and HOW property
rights are protected in democracy dictatorship
14Different reasons for protection of PPRR
- If Dictators do not expropriate (too much) and
protect ? rise in national income ? more taxes - If the democracy is to last, incumbents need to
delegate the protection of PPRR to disinterested
parties (e.g. independent courts)
15Theoretical Hypotheses
- In dictatorships time horizon of the
individual dictator ? protection of contract
and PPRR - In democracies duration of the democratic
system ? protection of contract and PPRR - So, time heals all wounds.
16Empirical analysis
- Proxies for the expected remaining life (of the
system/of the dictator) - for democracies current age of the democratic
system - for dictatorships years of the dictator in power
(?) -
- Whats wrong in tables 3-5?
17Results
- 1) confirm the hypotheses the longer
(dictator/democratic system) ? protection of
contract and PPRR - 2) point out an intriguing U- or J-shaped
relationship between democratization and
protection of contract and PPRR
18The mysterious case of the U- or J-shaped
relationship
- Increasingly, empirical studies tend to show
that - Consolidated/Old Democracies gt Dictatorships gt
Transitional/Young Democracies (Keefer 2007)
- (focus on time)
- Full/Totally Free Democracies gt Dictatorships gt
Semi-/Partially Free Democracies lt - (focus on degree of democracy)
19Keefer 2007
- Tackles the most intriguing puzzle in theory,
Democracy gt Dictatorship, but, in practice, many
democracies fall short of many autocracies in
many indicators of good government (e.g.
corruption) - Offers
- 1) theoretical explanation
- 2) empirically someone proves for the first time
the systematic performance differences between
Young and Old Democracies
20Theory
- In relation to Old Democracies, the Young ones
- underprovide non-targeted goods (e.g. education,
PPRR) - overprovide targeted goods (e.g. patronage)
- and are more corrupt
- Reason Young democracies candidates are not
credible
21How to win credibility?
- Two options for new incumbents
- Be Good Invest resources to show they can
provide public goods (costly) - Be Bad Rely on local patrons and deliver
targeted goods to them and their clients
(cheaper) - Problems with these options? Or with a theory
based on something vague such as credibility?
22Alternative factors?
- Young democracies also have more political
violence than Old ones - Reason more freedoms
- Short-time-horizon incumbents in Young D vs.
Long-term-horizon incumbents in Old D
23Empirical analysis
- His proxies for good government
- Nontargeted policies benefiting all citizens
secondary school enrollment, bureaucratic
quality, the rule of law, and government
ownership of newspapers - Targeted policies, benefiting discrete and
identifiable groups of voters public investment
(where pork barrel projects reside) and the
central government wage bill (which finances
patronage jobs). - Corruption standard measure of corruption
- Do you agree with the proxies? Do you think the
analysis supports his predictions?
24Expected effects of control variables
Nontargeted Goods Targeted
Goods Rent Seeking More presidential
Less Less Less More
majoritarian Less More Less Greater social
cleavages Less Less More More affected by
conflict Less Less More Less citizen
information Less Less More
25Problems with this analysis
- Any omitted variables you would introduce?
- Does his variable (age) remain strong after the
control variables are included? - Any other flaw?
26Adsera, Boix, and Payne 2003
- Important contributions to the debate What Causes
Good Government - Democracy necessary, but not sufficient
condition for good government. We also need Free
Press - Unlike most of the previous literature, the
theory here fleshes out the micro-mechanisms
through which rulers comply or are made to behave
in a benevolent fashion - Original test cross-country and within-country
(US)
27Mechanisms of the theory
- 1.Democracy gt Dictatorships
- Mechanism Electoral accountability
- 2.Better informed citizens gt Poorly informed
citizens - Mechanism No room to divert resources when
people know it! - 3.Capital mobility gt non-mobile assets (e.g. oil)
- Mechanism People can exit
28Empirical analysis
- Encompassing account of alternative explanatory
variables (p.451-457) - Main result as long as they introduce controls,
Democracy seems to exert less significant
influence on good government, but Free Press
remains strong - Fine, but sure you also found some problems
29World Bank Governance Indicators I
- "Not everything that can be counted counts, and
not everything that counts can be counted" - Albert Einstein
- 212 countries and territories
- Period 19962006
- Six dimensions of governance
- Voice and Accountability
- Political Stability and Absence of Violence
- Government Effectiveness Regulatory Quality
- Rule of Law
- Control of Corruption
30World Bank Governance Indicators II
- Reflect the views of enterprise, citizen and
expert survey respondents in industrial and
developing countries - They are aggregate indicators made with lots of
individual indicators by survey institutes, think
tanks, non-governmental organizations, and
international organizations
31World Bank Governance Indicators
- http//info.worldbank.org/governance/wgi2007/world
map_start.asp?allcountries1 - Intrinsic problem with these data statistically
significant differences at opposite ends of the
distribution of governance - Very difficult to discriminate among the majority
of countries with any degree of confidence
32Analysis of corruption in US States
- Which is the advantage of testing a theory in one
single country? Is there any added value? - Nice result more circulation of papers ? less
corruption - Other variables that matter electoral turnout (a
lot), social capital (a little) - Any omitted variable?