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Paths of Institutional Development: A View from Economic History

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Type: Journal Article
Author: Hoff, Karla
Journal: The World Bank Research Observer
Volume: 18
Page(s): 205-226
Date: 2003
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/5267
Sector: History
Social Organization
Region:
Subject(s): institutional change
economics--history
institutions--history
Abstract: "This article surveys an influential new research program on historical paths of institutional development and their consequences for growth. The research program exploits the experience of European colonialism as a natural experiment whose results bear on the way institutions affect development. The central hypothesis of this research is that societies that began with more extreme inequality were more likely to develop institutions allowing much of the population only limited access to economic opportunities. The research has uncovered a striking 'reversal of fortune': among the areas colonized by Europe, those that were relatively rich in the 1600s are today far poorer than the areas (such as the United States and Canada) that initially were viewed as relatively undesirable. The timing of the reversal—at the onset of the Industrial Revolution, when there was probably a premium on broad participation in commercial activity—suggests that institutions associated with high inequality may be a causal factor in low aggregate incomes. This research program is still at an early stage. But studies of institutions in India using data rich enough to permit hypothesis-testing provide evidence supporting the hypotheses developed in the analysis of the European colonial experience."

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