TY - JOUR
T1 - Political liberalization and human development
T2 - Dynamic Effects of Political Regime Change on Infant Mortality across Three Centuries (1800-2015)
AU - Annaka, Susumu
AU - Higashijima, Masaaki
N1 - Funding Information:
Previous versions of this paper were presented at Gakushuin University, Tohoku University, Waseda University, the IMT School for Advanced Studies, and the 2017 annual meetings of the European Political Science Association and the Japan Association of Comparative Politics. We greatly appreciate the feedback given by the participants in those conferences and workshops. We are also really thankful to the two anonymous reviewers and the Editors of World Development, as well as Rui Asano, Dan Hansen, Marisa Kellam, Masaru Kohno, Carl Henrik Knutsen, Keiichi Kubo, Ikuo Kume, Kaiji Motegi, Haruko Noguchi, Jan Teorell, and Yu Jin Woo for their helpful advice and thoughtful suggestions. This research was funded by the JSPS grants-in-aid (JP18J10578, 17H04779).
Funding Information:
Previous versions of this paper were presented at Gakushuin University, Tohoku University, Waseda University, the IMT School for Advanced Studies, and the 2017 annual meetings of the European Political Science Association and the Japan Association of Comparative Politics. We greatly appreciate the feedback given by the participants in those conferences and workshops. We are also really thankful to the two anonymous reviewers and the Editors of World Development, as well as Rui Asano, Dan Hansen, Marisa Kellam, Masaru Kohno, Carl Henrik Knutsen, Keiichi Kubo, Ikuo Kume, Kaiji Motegi, Haruko Noguchi, Jan Teorell, and Yu Jin Woo for their helpful advice and thoughtful suggestions. This research was funded by the JSPS grants-in-aid (JP18J10578, 17H04779).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s)
PY - 2021/11
Y1 - 2021/11
N2 - It has been long debated among comparativists whether democratic states advance human development. By regressing infant mortality rates on a cumulative score of democracy, recent studies have suggested that a long tradition of democracy is of greater importance than the present degree of democracy to explain human development. This approach, however, faces several issues and also fails to pinpoint the effect of a democratic reform at a certain point in time on future human welfare. We argue that political liberalization encourages policymakers to adopt poverty-alleviating policies, but such a policy change is more likely to bear substantive fruit over the relatively long run. Using newly collected panel data on infant mortality rates from 1800 to 2015 from 172 countries, we test our theoretical expectations. Applying error correction models to this extensive time-series cross-sectional data, we find that political liberalization is more likely to increase equal access to public services immediately but that infant mortality rates are reduced in the long run. These results suggest that democratic reforms do have a positive effect on human welfare, but the effect might appear with a passage of time as well as shrinks over time. Our research implies that policymakers may need to make tireless investments in the advancement of political liberalization to continue improving human well-being in the developing world.
AB - It has been long debated among comparativists whether democratic states advance human development. By regressing infant mortality rates on a cumulative score of democracy, recent studies have suggested that a long tradition of democracy is of greater importance than the present degree of democracy to explain human development. This approach, however, faces several issues and also fails to pinpoint the effect of a democratic reform at a certain point in time on future human welfare. We argue that political liberalization encourages policymakers to adopt poverty-alleviating policies, but such a policy change is more likely to bear substantive fruit over the relatively long run. Using newly collected panel data on infant mortality rates from 1800 to 2015 from 172 countries, we test our theoretical expectations. Applying error correction models to this extensive time-series cross-sectional data, we find that political liberalization is more likely to increase equal access to public services immediately but that infant mortality rates are reduced in the long run. These results suggest that democratic reforms do have a positive effect on human welfare, but the effect might appear with a passage of time as well as shrinks over time. Our research implies that policymakers may need to make tireless investments in the advancement of political liberalization to continue improving human well-being in the developing world.
KW - Democratization
KW - Human development
KW - Infant mortality
KW - Political liberalization
KW - Public goods provision
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U2 - 10.1016/j.worlddev.2021.105614
DO - 10.1016/j.worlddev.2021.105614
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85111841989
SN - 0305-750X
VL - 147
JO - World Development
JF - World Development
M1 - 105614
ER -