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Culture and constitutional compliance

Jerg Gutmann, Anna Lewczuk-Czerwińska, Jacek Lewkowicz and Stefan Voigt

No 85, ILE Working Paper Series from University of Hamburg, Institute of Law and Economics

Abstract: Constitutions as the formal foundation of a country's legal and political system have important economic and political effects. Yet, we still know little about why constitutions set effective constraints on politicians in some societies, while being largely disregarded in others. Here, we ask if national culture matters for constitutional compliance. We study a cross-section of 115 countries, making use of novel indicators of constitutional compliance. We find that societies with a more individualistic population exhibit higher levels of compliance. These results are robust and extend to instrumental variable estimations. They imply a novel transmission channel from cultural traits to long-term economic development: individualistic national culture increases the credibility of constitutional self-commitments. Our analysis also supports the more general idea that the effects of formal institutions depend on the informal institutional environment in which they are embedded. Regarding religion, our results are consistent with past research that attributes the lack of development in the modern Muslim world to deficient institutional quality.

Keywords: Constitutional compliance; culture; individualism; Islam; long-term orientation; moral universalism; power distance; rule of law (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: H11 K10 K42 P48 Z10 Z12 Z18 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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