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Lawyers and Politicians: The Impact of Organized Legal Professions on Institutional Reforms

Peter Grajzl and Peter Murrell

Electronic Working Papers from University of Maryland, Department of Economics

Abstract: Organized legal professions are typically viewed by economists as rent-seeking interest groups. Starting from the observation that the legal professions have been central in institutional development in countries with the highest quality institutions, we add a different perspective, developing a model that identifies the link between the role of organized professions and the quality of reform. Professional review of interest-group reform proposals solves informational problems when the government's longevity is uncertain. This occurs even though the only direct effect of the organized profession is the one that usually attracts negative commentary, delay caused by deliberation. The profession's expertise makes the delay credible. The model predicts how the role of organized legal professions varies with democracy and political stability, showing that these are substitutes. Professional power and democracy are also substitutes. The predictions cast new light on why 1688 in England and 1789 in France had such different consequences, why the role of legal professions might be weaker in early post-communist transition than in the USSR, why transitions from autocracy are path dependent, why and when civil law and common law systems differ, and why post-independence institutions are of higher quality in settler than in extractive colonies. The paper foreshadows a rigorous analysis of civil society's contribution to economic development.

Keywords: Organized professions; legal profession; institutional reform; interest groups; civil society; civil law and common law; colonies; Soviet Union; Louis XIV; Glorious Revolution (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D72 D82 H10 K40 N40 P51 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 56 pages
Date: 2004-10
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Journal Article: Lawyers and politicians: the impact of organized legal professions on institutional reforms (2006) Downloads
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Department of Economics, University of Maryland, Tydings Hall, College Park, MD 20742

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