Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Democracy, the market, and the law
- Part II Democracy and economic growth
- 5 Government spending and economic growth under democracy and dictatorship
- 6 Rent seeking and redistribution under democracy versus dictatorship
- 7 Democratic governments, economic growth, and income distribution
- Part III Democratic deficiencies and possible improvements
- Part IV Democratic expectations
- Index
5 - Government spending and economic growth under democracy and dictatorship
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Democracy, the market, and the law
- Part II Democracy and economic growth
- 5 Government spending and economic growth under democracy and dictatorship
- 6 Rent seeking and redistribution under democracy versus dictatorship
- 7 Democratic governments, economic growth, and income distribution
- Part III Democratic deficiencies and possible improvements
- Part IV Democratic expectations
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Our purpose is to assess whether the economic size of the public sector is too small or too big to promote economic growth, first in general for all countries in the world and then for political regimes dichotomized as democracies and dictatorships. Even if many believe that, as Rodrik (1992, p. 331) puts it, “it is the quality of intervention that matters, not its quantity,” we show that mere quantity does have consequences. Our econometric analysis extends and modifies that of Ram (1986), but we also seek to place the econometric analysis in a broader theoretical context.
Section 2 is an introduction to the perennial discussion of the relation between the state and the market. Section 3 summarizes alternative ways of thinking about the economic role of government. Section 4 sets up the econometric analysis, the results of which are presented in Section 5. Finally, Section 6 examines the impact of regimes.
The state and the market
Capitalism is a system in which most productive resources are owned privately. Yet under capitalism, property is institutionally distinct from political authority. As a result, there are two mechanisms by which resources can be allocated to uses and distributed among households: the market and the state. The market is a mechanism in which scarce resources are allocated by their owners: Individuals cast votes for allocations with the resources they own and these resources happen to be always distributed unequally. The state is also a system that allocates resources, including those it does not own, with rights distributed differently from the market.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Understanding DemocracyEconomic and Political Perspectives, pp. 107 - 124Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997