3,154 research outputs found
Turkeyâs accession to the European Union: debating the most difficult enlargement ever
This study focuses on the intricacies of Turkeyâs prospective membership in the European Union. It begins with a chronology of EU-Turkey relations and an account of the debate on the future of the European Union, which relates to Turkeyâs prospective E.U. membership. It then explores the strategic implications of Turkeyâs accession to the European Union and addresses recent developments on the issue, with an emphasis on the start of accession negotiations on Oct. 3, 2005. In conclusion, this study highlights the factors that may have an impact on the outcome of EU-Turkey accession negotiations in the coming years
Chinese dialects, revolutionary war & economic performance
In this paper, we explore the effects of dialectal diversity on economic performance by
drawing evidence from Chinese prefecture-level cities. Our dataset is a panel of 5-year average data
over the period from 2001 to 2015 including 274 cities. We compute five indices of Chinese dialectal
diversity: 1. Dialectal fractionalization; 2. Adjusted dialectal fractionalization; 3. Dialectal polarization;
4. Adjusted dialectal polarization and 5. Periphery heterogeneity. We find that dialectal
fractionalization and dialectal polarization as well as periphery heterogeneity have a positive effect
on both income per capita and economic growth. Adjusted dialectal fractionalization exhibits a
positive effect only on the change in economic growth over time. However, adjusted dialectal
polarization does not show any robust effects. Furthermore, the experience of being governed by the
Chinese Communist Party during the revolutionary war inhibits the negative effects of dialectal
diversity in eastern China, while it has persistent negative effects in central and north-eastern regions
of the country
persistent regions, rising nations
In this paper, we examine the economic and political effects of the breakup of East
Prussia into what is today Poland, Russia and Lithuania. We explore the dissolution
of imperial regions into the boundaries of modern states, adding new insights to the
research on the imperial legacies. We expect that German imperial legacies in the
form of advanced economic institutions, and specifically East Prussian legacies of
nationalistic and conservative political preferences, persist in the territories of former
East Prussia in Poland, Russia and Lithuania compared to neighboring regions in
their respective countries. We find no pattern of persistence in former East Prussian
territories of contemporary Poland, whereas East Prussian persistence appears to
be robust in Lithuania. We find strong evidence for the comparative persistence
of political preferences in the Kaliningrad region, whereas we observe no economic
spillovers. Drawing evidence from West German electoral data in the aftermath of
World War II, we find that the presence of East Prussian refugees is conducive to
conservative and nationalist support in the FRG. Hence, the East Prussian legacy
relates primarily to the persistence of political preferences and migrating agents
the finance-growth perspective
This paper explores the impact of antiquity on capitalism through the finance-growth nexus. We define antiquity as the length of established statehood (i.e., state history) and agricultural years. We argue that extractive institutions and deeply entrenched interest groups may prevail in societies with ancient roots. The paper offers an in-depth analysis of one particular channel through which extractive institutions may impair economic growth: the finance-growth channel. We propose that in countries with ancient statehood, the financial sector might be captured by powerful economic and political elites leading to a distorted finance-growth relationship. We build a model in which the equilibrium relationship between companies and banks depends on the entrenchment of the economic elites and the length of established statehood. To validate our argument empirically, we run panel-threshold regressions on a global sample between 1970 and 2014. The regression results are supportive and show that financial development â measured by the outstanding amount of credit â is negative for growth in states with ancient institutional origins, while it is positive in relatively younger ones
Market Reform, Regional Energy and Popular Representation: Evidence from Post-Soviet Russia
This article investigates the relative impact of regional energy production on the energy voting choices of State Duma deputies between 1994 and 2003, controlling for other factors such as party affiliation, electoral mandate, committee membership and socio-demographic parameters. We apply Pooleâs optimal classification method of roll call votes using an ordered probit model to explain energy market reform in the first decade of Russiaâs democratic transition. Our main finding is that the gas production factor is inter temporally important in the formation of the deputiesâ legislative choices and shows Gazpromâs strategic position in the post-Soviet Russian economy. The oil production factor is variably significant in the two first Dumas, when the main legislative debates on oil privatization occur. The energy committee membership tends to consistently explain pro-reform voting choices. The pro-and anti-reform poles observed in our Poole-based single dimensional scale are not necessarily connected with liberal and state-oriented policies respectively.energy regulation, market reform, energy resources, roll call votes, legislative politics, State Duma, Russia
Energy Regulation, Roll Call Votes and Regional Resources: Evidence from Russia
This paper investigates the relative impact of regional energy production on the legislative choices of Russian Duma deputies on energy regulation between 1994 and 2003. We apply Pooleâs optimal classification method of roll call votes using an ordered probit model to explain energy law reform in the first decade of Russiaâs democratic transition. Our goal is to analyze the relative importance of home energy on deputiesâ behavior, controlling for other factors such as party affiliation, electoral mandate, committee membership and socio-demographic parameters. We observe that energy resource factors have a considerable effect on deputiesâ voting behavior. On the other hand, we concurrently find that regional economic preferences are constrained by the public policy priorities of the federal center that continue to set the tone in energy law reform in post-Soviet Russia.Energy Regulation, Energy Roll Law Reform, Energy Resources, Roll Call Votes, Legislative Politics, State Duma, Russia
Religious origins of democracies and dictatorships
In this paper, I argue that religion matters for the emergence of democracies
and dictatorships. Religion is defined as a stochastically set demand for
public goods. Different types of religious collectives reflect different
tradeoffs between centralized resource distribution and market rewards.
Religions are defined as collectivist, when their respective collectives
facilitate the hierarchical provision of common pool resources toward their
members at the expense of market incentives. Religions are defined as
individualist, when their respective collectives recruit and preserve their
members on the basis of market incentives. Islam, Orthodoxy and Catholicism
are treated as collectivist religions, whereas Judaism and Protestantism as
individualist ones. I provide a historical overview that designates the Jewish
kibbutz as the collective of democracy and the Russian-Orthodox monastery as
the collective of dictatorship. Assuming a collectivist economy, I solve the
radical government and modernization stochastic games. I find that
modernization occurs in a collectivist economy when the threat of a radical
government is imminent and when the leader has high extraction rents over the
economy. In order to stay in power, the leader credibly commits to provide
more public goods in the future, and thus modernization occurs.
Underdevelopment occurs at intermediate levels of state enforcement,
modernization at low levels and centralization at high levels of state
enforcement. The emergence of a radical government is more likely in a
collectivist rather than in an individualist economy
Aristotle vs. Plato: The Distributive Origins of the Cold War
Competing definitions of justice in Platoâs Republic and Aristotleâs Politics indicate the existence of two distinct economic systems with different normative priorities. The three-class society of the Platonic economy (guardians, auxiliaries, producers) gives rise to guardians who by virtue are expected to enforce output targets on producers directly or through auxiliaries. The three-class society of the Aristotelian economy (rich, middle, poor) facilitates the emergence of different ruling coalitions and compensates efficiency losses of vertical production processes with political gains derived from representative governance. In the Aristotelian economy, the middle class is better off than in the Platonic economy (auxiliaries), because a just society (polity) is achieved under its rule. I argue that the equilibrium solutions of the Platonic and Aristotelian systems provide the normative foundations for the distinction between plan and market
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