The primacy of institutions reconsidered: Direct income effects of malaria prevalence

K. Carstensen, E. Gundlach
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引用次数: 102

Abstract

Some recent empirical studies deny any direct effect of geography on development and conclude that institutions dominate all other potential determinants of development. An alternative view emphasizes that geographic factors such as disease ecology, as proxied by the prevalence of malaria, may have a large negative effect on income, independent of the quality of a country’s institutions. For instance, pandemic malaria may create a large economic burden beyond medical costs and forgone earnings by affecting household behavior and such macroeconomic variables as international investment and trade. After controlling for institutional quality, malaria prevalence is found to cause quantitatively important negative effects on income. The robustness of this finding is checked by employing alternative instrumental variables, tests of overidentification restrictions, and tests of the validity of the point estimates and standard errors in the presence of weak instruments. The baseline findings appear to be robust to using alternative specifications, instrumentations, and samples. The reported estimates suggest that good institutions may be necessary but not sufficient for generating a persistent process of successful economic development.
重新考虑制度的首要地位:疟疾流行对收入的直接影响
最近的一些实证研究否认地理对发展的任何直接影响,并得出结论认为制度主导着所有其他潜在的发展决定因素。另一种观点强调,地理因素,如疟疾流行所代表的疾病生态,可能对收入产生很大的负面影响,而与一个国家机构的质量无关。例如,疟疾大流行可能通过影响家庭行为和国际投资和贸易等宏观经济变量,造成医疗费用和放弃收入以外的巨大经济负担。在控制了机构质量之后,发现疟疾流行对收入造成了数量上重要的负面影响。这一发现的稳健性是通过采用替代工具变量、过度识别限制测试以及在存在弱工具的情况下对点估计和标准误差的有效性测试来检查的。基线结果对于使用其他规格、仪器和样本似乎是可靠的。所报告的估计数表明,良好的体制可能是必要的,但不足以产生持久的成功的经济发展进程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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