Does democracy cause growth? A meta-analysis (of 2000 regressions)

Marco Colagrossi, Domenico Rossignoli*, Mario Agostino Maggioni

*Autore corrispondente per questo lavoro

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo in rivistaArticolo in rivista

4 Citazioni (Scopus)

Abstract

The relationship between democracy and economic growth has been widely debated in the social sciences with contrasting results. We apply a meta-analytical framework surveying 188 studies (2047 models) covering 36 years of research in the field. We also compare the effect of democracy on growth with the effect of human capital on growth in a sub-sample of 111 studies (875 models). Our findings suggest that democracy has a positive and direct effect on economic growth beyond the reach of publication bias, albeit weaker (about one third) of that of human capital. Further, the growth effect of democracy appears to be stronger in more recent papers not surveyed in Doucouliagos and Ulubaşoğlu (2008). Finally, we show that the heterogeneity in the reported results is mainly driven by spatial and temporal differences in the samples, indicating that the democracy and growth nexus is not homogeneous across world regions and decades.
Lingua originaleEnglish
pagine (da-a)N/A-N/A
RivistaEuropean Journal of Political Economy
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 2020

Keywords

  • Democracy
  • Economic growth
  • Human capital
  • Meta-analysis

Fingerprint

Entra nei temi di ricerca di 'Does democracy cause growth? A meta-analysis (of 2000 regressions)'. Insieme formano una fingerprint unica.

Cita questo