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Institutions Rule Property rights If you’re insecure in your property, why innovate? Why accumulate? Rule of law Can contracts be enforced? (Anglo) common law trumps (French) civil law? Trust Will contracts be honored? Suffrage...and restrictions Can elites be challenged? Who rules for whom?

Institutions Rule

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Institutions Rule. Property rights If you’re insecure in your property, why innovate? Why accumulate? Rule of law Can contracts be enforced? (Anglo) common law trumps (French) civil law? Trust Will contracts be honored? Suffrage...and restrictions Can elites be challenged? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Institutions Rule

Institutions Rule

Property rights• If you’re insecure in your property, why innovate? Why

accumulate?Rule of law• Can contracts be enforced?• (Anglo) common law trumps (French) civil law?

Trust• Will contracts be honored?

Suffrage...and restrictions• Can elites be challenged?• Who rules for whom?

Page 2: Institutions Rule

Institutions Rule

Education• Are citizens literate?• Does government promote productivity?

Finance• Can aspirations be funded?

Labor relations• Free or slave?• Individual on her own or union solidarity?

Land ownership and use• Large grants or small homesteads?• Plantations or farms/Proprietors or smallholders?

Page 3: Institutions Rule

Institutions RuleTaxation and expenditure• Public or private enterprise?• Redistribution or status quo?

Patents• Are ideas protected?

Emigration/Immigration• Slave or free?• Open or restricted?• Integration or segregation?

Religion and culture• Belief or empiricism?• Fundamentalism or secularism?

Page 4: Institutions Rule

Endowments MatterGeography: Resource use/resource curse• Climate• Disease environment• Soil quality• Minerals: gold???• Access to markets: seas/rivers/landlocked

Demography• Population density• Human capital

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Endowments – Institutions - Endowments

Inequality: cause and effectPolitical power Economic power

Reinforce status quo?Promote progress?

Page 6: Institutions Rule

Inequality MattersCountry Top to Bottom Gini Coefficient (Mid Decades/Year)

OECD, before tax 6.4 (20% in ‘90s) 34.8 (‘70s) 33.2 (‘80s) 33.8 (’90s) ----- (‘00s)

USA, before net taxes 15.9 (10%) 8.4 (20%) 40.6 (‘70s) 43.6 (‘80s) 47.7 (’90s) 48.6 (‘00s)

USA, after net taxes 31.6 (‘70s) 33.7 (‘80s) 36.1 (‘90s) 38.0 (‘00s)

UK, before net taxes 13.8 (10%) 7.2 (20%) 33.8 (‘70s) 41.9 (‘80s) 45.3 (‘90s) 44.5 (‘00s)

UK, after net taxes 26.8 (‘70s) 30.9 (‘80s) 33.6 (‘90s) 33.1 (‘00s)

CND, before net taxes 9.4 (10%) 5.5 (20%) 38.5 (‘70s) 39.5 (‘80s) 43.0 (‘90s) 43.6 (‘00s)

CND, after net taxes 30.4 (‘70s) 29.3 (‘80s) 28.9 (‘90s) 31.7 (‘00s)

SWD, before net taxes 6.2 (10%) 4.0 (20%) 38.9 (‘70s) 40.0 (‘80s) 43.8 (‘90s) 43.2 (‘00s)

SWD, after net taxes 21.2 (‘70s) 19.8 (‘80s) 21.1 (‘90s) 23.4 (‘00s)

Latin Am, before tax 11.7 (20% in ‘90s) 49.1 (‘70s) 49.8 (‘80s) 49.3 (‘90s) ----- (‘00s)

Mexico 21.6 (10%) 12.8 (20%) 48.3 (‘08)

Peru 26.1 (10%) 16.2 (20%) 48.1 (‘10)

Brazil 11.0 (10%) 12.0 (20%) 54.7 (‘09)

Chile 26.2 (10%) 15.7 (20%) 52.1 (‘09)

Panama 49.9 (10%) 23.9 (20%) 51.9 (10)

Haiti 54.4 (10%) 26.6 (20%) 59.2 (‘01)

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Inequality in the USA: The Top 10%

Source: Emmanuel Saez, Striking it Richer, 2010

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USA’s Top 1% vs. the rest of the top 10%

Page 13: Institutions Rule

USA: The Working Rich

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Endowments – Institutions – Development Vignette I: The Conquistador Model

A. Mexico/Peru – Densely settled empires• Kidnap the ruler/Ransom the ruler/Kill the ruler• Displace the ruler Encomienda system

• Large land grants/Natives come with the land – the mita system

Inequality – Extractive institutions Persistent inequality – Stagnation

B. Jamestown – sparsely settled tribal lands• Cagey chief...what, kidnap me?• Absence of gold...work or starve starve • Import colonists

• No incentives no product no gain• Create incentives Distribute land

Relative equality – Open institutionsEvolution – Progress

Page 15: Institutions Rule

Endowments – Institutions – Development Vignette II: Finance

A. Latin America• Large native population conquest extractive institutions• Tropical soils plantation crops (sugar, tobacco, cotton) slavery• Minerals (gold, silver) encomiendas

Economic and political inequalityBank charters to elites Lending to elites Reinforce status quo

B. Northeast and mid-west United States• Rocky soils small-scale grain farming

Relative equalityMany small banks chartered* – intercommunity lending

“Democratic” credit Development and change

*States eager to charter banks as revenue source.