The Ambiguous Effects of Democracy on Bureaucratic Quality
(2018) In STANCE Working Papers Series 2018(3). p.1-47- Abstract
- Recent studies find that higher degrees of democracy are related to higher levels of bureaucratic quality. However, they only offer limited explanations for this pattern based on a unidimensional understanding of democracy. We argue that future uncertainties as perceived by the incumbent, the opposition, and voters are important for why bureaucratic reform takes place. Therefore, we expect no uniform effects of democracy but that the effect depends on the socioeconomic status of the median voter. Empirically, we examine the separate effects of three dimensions of democracy – competitive elections, legislative constraints on the executive, and suffrage. Based on a global sample of countries from 1790 to 2016 that adds historical depth and... (More)
- Recent studies find that higher degrees of democracy are related to higher levels of bureaucratic quality. However, they only offer limited explanations for this pattern based on a unidimensional understanding of democracy. We argue that future uncertainties as perceived by the incumbent, the opposition, and voters are important for why bureaucratic reform takes place. Therefore, we expect no uniform effects of democracy but that the effect depends on the socioeconomic status of the median voter. Empirically, we examine the separate effects of three dimensions of democracy – competitive elections, legislative constraints on the executive, and suffrage. Based on a global sample of countries from 1790 to 2016 that adds historical depth and variation on bureaucratic quality and the dimensions of democracy, the results show that competitive elections and legislative constraints are connected with higher levels of bureaucratic quality. However, the third dimension of suffrage is not related to bureaucratic quality. Rather, the positive effects of competitive elections and legislative constraints seem to decrease in times of large suffrage extensions. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/c1b7e302-79e3-4f17-baa1-62aa88777463
- author
- Cornell, Agnes LU and Andersen, David
- organization
- publishing date
- 2018-05
- type
- Working paper/Preprint
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Democracy, bureaucarcy, Bureaucratic quality
- in
- STANCE Working Papers Series
- volume
- 2018
- issue
- 3
- pages
- 47 pages
- publisher
- Lund University
- project
- State-Making and the Origins of Global Order in the Long Nineteenth Century and Beyond
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- c1b7e302-79e3-4f17-baa1-62aa88777463
- date added to LUP
- 2018-06-12 10:04:52
- date last changed
- 2021-03-22 18:12:54
@misc{c1b7e302-79e3-4f17-baa1-62aa88777463, abstract = {{Recent studies find that higher degrees of democracy are related to higher levels of bureaucratic quality. However, they only offer limited explanations for this pattern based on a unidimensional understanding of democracy. We argue that future uncertainties as perceived by the incumbent, the opposition, and voters are important for why bureaucratic reform takes place. Therefore, we expect no uniform effects of democracy but that the effect depends on the socioeconomic status of the median voter. Empirically, we examine the separate effects of three dimensions of democracy – competitive elections, legislative constraints on the executive, and suffrage. Based on a global sample of countries from 1790 to 2016 that adds historical depth and variation on bureaucratic quality and the dimensions of democracy, the results show that competitive elections and legislative constraints are connected with higher levels of bureaucratic quality. However, the third dimension of suffrage is not related to bureaucratic quality. Rather, the positive effects of competitive elections and legislative constraints seem to decrease in times of large suffrage extensions.}}, author = {{Cornell, Agnes and Andersen, David}}, keywords = {{Democracy; bureaucarcy; Bureaucratic quality}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Working Paper}}, number = {{3}}, pages = {{1--47}}, publisher = {{Lund University}}, series = {{STANCE Working Papers Series}}, title = {{The Ambiguous Effects of Democracy on Bureaucratic Quality}}, volume = {{2018}}, year = {{2018}}, }