Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/8441

Title: The Political Economy of Democratic Governance and Economic Development
Authors: Branco, Manuel Couret
Keywords: Economic Development
Democracy
Governance
Human Rights
Political Economy
Issue Date: 2006
Citation: Branco, M. (2006), The Political Economy of Democratic Governance and Economic Development ,Documento de Trabalho nº 2006/12, Universidade de Évora, Departamento
Abstract: Pure mainstream economics, based on methodological and sociological individualism usually ignores politics; development economics, on the contrary frequently integrates social and political factors in order to explain economic progress. Within this branch of economics, politics can mainly be dealt in two different approaches. The classical and neoclassical approach takes politics essentially as an obstacle to the expression of agents’ rationality, and, therefore considers it a disturbance. A more heterodox approach of development, on the contrary, puts politics at the heart of the process, development being an economic as much as a political process. Those, like A. Sen, that take human rights, both as a means and an end to development do not separate the two processes as well. Be that as it may, and despite the opposed ways in which these approaches take politics, all consider governance, and its democratic or authoritarian character, a key factor in the development process. The main purpose of this paper is to discuss the importance of the issue of democratic governance within the development process. In the first part of the paper I will make a review of the main literature concerning the impacts of democracy on economic development and the importance of promoting democracy. In the second part of the paper the analysis will focus on the political economy of democratization, namely on the obstacles standing before democracy, and on the economic policies and reforms needed to facilitate democratization. The diagnosis states that democratization needs to deal with inequality of income distribution, with institutional design in order to overcome cultural divisions within the nations, with diversification of the sources of income and with a new economic order characterized by an erased debt burden and a more equitable distribution of the benefits of international trade.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/8441
Type: workingPaper
Appears in Collections:ECN - Working Papers (RePEc)

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