Democratization and Human Development
Susumu Annaka () and
Masaaki Higashijima ()
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Susumu Annaka: Ph.D. Candidate of Political Science in the Graduate School of Political Science at Waseda University
Masaaki Higashijima: Political Science in the Graduate School of Information Sciences at Tohoku University
No 1712, Working Papers from Waseda University, Faculty of Political Science and Economics
Abstract:
Comparativists have long debated whether democracy advances human development. Recent studies suggest that the stock of democracy is more important than the current level of democracy to predict infant mortality rates, an often-used measure of human welfare. The “stock” argument, however, does not explore whether a democratic regime change at a point in time affects people's welfare thereafter. Moreover, the extant crossnational work encounters three problems in panel regression analysis: They do not correct for historical trends in infant mortality and the number of democracies, employ country-fixed effects on data with a short time-horizon mostly starting from 1960, and do not deal with possible endogeneity between democracy and human development. Using a newly collected panel data of infant mortality covering from 1800 to 2015, we revisit this debate. Applying the Error Correction Models (ECM) with Instrumental Variables (IV) estimation, we find that democratization has only a long-run effect on reducing infant mortality.
Pages: 35 pages
Date: 2017-08
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-pol
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