An empirical analysis of state fragility and growth: The impact of state ineffectiveness and political violence

Research output: Working paperResearch

Standard

An empirical analysis of state fragility and growth : The impact of state ineffectiveness and political violence. / Ferreira, Ines.

2018.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Ferreira, I 2018 'An empirical analysis of state fragility and growth: The impact of state ineffectiveness and political violence'. <https://www.wider.unu.edu/sites/default/files/Publications/Working-paper/PDF/wp2018-29.pdf>

APA

Ferreira, I. (2018). An empirical analysis of state fragility and growth: The impact of state ineffectiveness and political violence. UNU WIDER Working Paper Series Vol. 2018 No. 29 https://www.wider.unu.edu/sites/default/files/Publications/Working-paper/PDF/wp2018-29.pdf

Vancouver

Ferreira I. An empirical analysis of state fragility and growth: The impact of state ineffectiveness and political violence. 2018 Feb.

Author

Ferreira, Ines. / An empirical analysis of state fragility and growth : The impact of state ineffectiveness and political violence. 2018. (UNU WIDER Working Paper Series; No. 29, Vol. 2018).

Bibtex

@techreport{4e4e877fb9d946c19f999cc31630334d,
title = "An empirical analysis of state fragility and growth: The impact of state ineffectiveness and political violence",
abstract = "The role of the state in promoting development is well established in the institutional economics literature. Yet, in recent decades the attention has been turned to the opposite side of the spectrum. Facing high levels of poverty and showing a slower progress in achieving development outcomes, fragile states raised concerns among the development community, which felt urged to assist them. However, the quantitative empirical literature examining the link between state fragility and development is still relatively scanty. This paper sheds light on this issue by proposing an approach that comprises indicators for state ineffectiveness and political violence as two dimensions of state fragility, and by using data for the period 1993–2012 in order to understand their impact on growth. The results from standard econometric methods suggest that there is a significant negative effect of state ineffectiveness on economic growth, whereas they fail to find any significant impact of political violence.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, state fragility, state ineffectiveness, political violence, economic growth, OLS, IV",
author = "Ines Ferreira",
year = "2018",
month = feb,
language = "English",
series = "UNU WIDER Working Paper Series",
number = "29",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - An empirical analysis of state fragility and growth

T2 - The impact of state ineffectiveness and political violence

AU - Ferreira, Ines

PY - 2018/2

Y1 - 2018/2

N2 - The role of the state in promoting development is well established in the institutional economics literature. Yet, in recent decades the attention has been turned to the opposite side of the spectrum. Facing high levels of poverty and showing a slower progress in achieving development outcomes, fragile states raised concerns among the development community, which felt urged to assist them. However, the quantitative empirical literature examining the link between state fragility and development is still relatively scanty. This paper sheds light on this issue by proposing an approach that comprises indicators for state ineffectiveness and political violence as two dimensions of state fragility, and by using data for the period 1993–2012 in order to understand their impact on growth. The results from standard econometric methods suggest that there is a significant negative effect of state ineffectiveness on economic growth, whereas they fail to find any significant impact of political violence.

AB - The role of the state in promoting development is well established in the institutional economics literature. Yet, in recent decades the attention has been turned to the opposite side of the spectrum. Facing high levels of poverty and showing a slower progress in achieving development outcomes, fragile states raised concerns among the development community, which felt urged to assist them. However, the quantitative empirical literature examining the link between state fragility and development is still relatively scanty. This paper sheds light on this issue by proposing an approach that comprises indicators for state ineffectiveness and political violence as two dimensions of state fragility, and by using data for the period 1993–2012 in order to understand their impact on growth. The results from standard econometric methods suggest that there is a significant negative effect of state ineffectiveness on economic growth, whereas they fail to find any significant impact of political violence.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - state fragility

KW - state ineffectiveness

KW - political violence

KW - economic growth

KW - OLS

KW - IV

M3 - Working paper

T3 - UNU WIDER Working Paper Series

BT - An empirical analysis of state fragility and growth

ER -

ID: 201900197