Institutions and Growth : a GMM/IV Panel VAR Approach

Both sides of the institutions and growth debate have resorted largely to microeconometric techniques in testing hypotheses. In this paper, I build a panel structural vector autoregression (SVAR) model for a short panel of 119 countries over 10 years and find support for the institutions hypothesis. Controlling for individual fixed effects, I find that exogenous shocks to a proxy for institutional quality have a positive and statistically significant effect on GDP per capita. On average, a 1 percent shock in institutional quality leads to a peak 1.7 percent increase in GDP per capita after six years. Results are robust to using a different proxy for institutional quality. There are different dynamics for advanced economies and developing countries. This suggests diminishing returns to institutional quality improvements.
Publication date: July 2015
ISBN: 9781513555508
$18.00
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Topics covered in this book

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Economics- Macroeconomics , Economics / General , International - Economics , Institutions , Panel VAR , Economic Development , gdp , gdp per capita , results , Semiparametric and Nonparametric Methods , Models with Panel Data , Institutions and Growth , Economic Development

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