"Political institutions and the long-term effects of commodity booms: evidence within a theoretical framework of economic stagnation"
Professor Advisor
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Engel Goetz, Eduardo
Author
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Muñoz Dos Santos, Matías
Admission date
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2025-12-30T17:02:10Z
Available date
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2025-12-30T17:02:10Z
Publication date
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2025
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/208150
Abstract
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n early stages of development, macro-level reforms are fundamental for economic
growth. However, as economies advance, the importance of complementary micro-level reforms
grows, accompanied by an intensification of lobbying pressures that do not often promote growth.
This situation shifts the focus to the capacity of the political system to sustain long-term economic
progress. Without institutional adaptation, stagnation becomes likely through two key mechanisms.
First, economic development brings greater regulatory and legal complexity, requiring a political
system capable of implementing and sustaining growth-enhancing reforms. Second, outdated
political institutions distort incentives for resource allocation, making excessive redistribution
to interest groups more politically appealing than investing in productivity-enhancing public
goods. This misalignment undermines long-term growth potential. To explore these dynamics, the
analysis begins with a sample of economies that have either stagnated or ceased to converge toward
the frontier. It then incorporates a commodity boom scenario to reinterpret the theoretical model
proposed by Besley et al. (2013), illustrating how such external shocks interact with institutional
and political dynamics. This extended framework is empirically examined using the case of Chile
by tracking the evolution of key parameters that shape economic outcomes. The analysis concludes
that during times of widespread commodity boom prosperity, there are no incentives to improve
the political system, as immediate commodity boom wealth diminishes the perceived need for
reform and encourages excessive redistribution. But when the boom ends, outdated institutions
hold back growth, showing how lack of reform of the political system can block economic growth.
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Universidad de Chile
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Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States