What determines democracy? And what helps to maintain it?


METADATA ONLY
Loading...

Date

2012-08-11

Publication Type

Other Publication

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric
METADATA ONLY

Data

Rights / License

Abstract

There are many stories of democracy but little consensus over which variables robustly determine its emergence and survival. We apply extreme bounds analysis to test the robustness of 59 factors proposed in the literature, evaluating over 3 million regressions. The most robust determinants of the transition to democracy are GDP growth (a negative effect), past transitions (a positive effect), and OECD membership (a positive effect). There is some evidence that fuel exporters and Muslim countries are less likely to see democracy emerge, although the latter finding is driven entirely by oil producing Muslim countries. Regarding the survival of democracy, the most robust determinants are GDP per capita (a positive effect) and past transitions (a negative effect). There is some evidence that having a former military leader as the chief executive has a negative effect, while having other democracies as neighbors has a reinforcing effect.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

Centre for Economic Policy Research

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Democracy; Extreme bounds analysis; Regime transition

Organisational unit

03716 - Sturm, Jan-Egbert / Sturm, Jan-Egbert check_circle
02525 - KOF Konjunkturforschungsstelle / KOF Swiss Economic Institute check_circle

Notes

Funding

Related publications and datasets