Why Nations Fail

by

Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson

Inclusive Political and Economic Institutions Term Analysis

Inclusive political and economic institutions are designed to benefit the majority of society (and not just the elite, which benefits most from extractive institutions). The authors argue that political systems need to broadly distribute power in order to be inclusive. Such inclusive political systems tend to naturally support inclusive economic institutions, which protect the majority of society’s rights to own private property and freely pursue new opportunities on a level playing field.

Inclusive Political and Economic Institutions Quotes in Why Nations Fail

The Why Nations Fail quotes below are all either spoken by Inclusive Political and Economic Institutions or refer to Inclusive Political and Economic Institutions. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
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Chapter 3 Quotes

Inclusive economic institutions, such as those in South Korea or in the United States, are those that allow and encourage participation by the great mass of people in economic activities that make best use of their talents and skills and that enable individuals to make the choices they wish. To be inclusive, economic institutions must feature secure private property, an unbiased system of law, and a provision of public services that provides a level playing field in which people can exchange and contract; it also must permit the entry of new businesses and allow people to choose their careers.

The contrast of South and North Korea, and of the United States and Latin America, illustrates a general principle. Inclusive economic institutions foster economic activity, productivity growth, and economic prosperity.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 74-75
Explanation and Analysis:

Politics is the process by which a society chooses the rules that will govern it. Politics surrounds institutions for the simple reason that while inclusive institutions may be good for the economic prosperity of a nation, some people or groups, such as the elite of the Communist Party of North Korea or the sugar planters of colonial Barbados, will be much better off by setting up institutions that are extractive. When there is conflict over institutions, what happens depends on which people or group wins out in the game of politics—who can get more support, obtain additional resources, and form more effective alliances. In short, who wins depends on the distribution of political power in society.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:

Opposition to economic growth has its own, unfortunately coherent, logic. Economic growth and technological change are accompanied by what the great economist Joseph Schumpeter called creative destruction. They replace the old with the new. New sectors attract resources away from old ones. New firms take business away from established ones. New technologies make existing skills and machines obsolete. The process of economic growth and the inclusive institutions upon which it is based create losers as well as winners in the political arena and in the economic marketplace. Fear of creative destruction is often at the root of the opposition to inclusive economic and political institutions.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

The Black Death is a vivid example of a critical juncture, a major event or confluence of factors disrupting the existing economic or political balance in society. A critical juncture is a double-edged sword that can cause a sharp turn in the trajectory of a nation. On the one hand it can open the way for breaking the cycle of extractive institutions and enable more inclusive ones to emerge, as in England. Or it can intensify the emergence of extractive institutions, as was the case with the Second Serfdom in Eastern Europe.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Explanation and Analysis:

England was unique among nations when it made the breakthrough to sustained economic growth in the seventeenth century. Major economic changes were preceded by a political revolution that brought a distinct set of economic and political institutions, much more inclusive than those of any previous society. […] The Glorious Revolution limited the power of the king and the executive, and relocated to Parliament the power to determine economic institutions. At the same time, it opened up the political system to a broad cross section of society, who were able to exert considerable influence over the way the state functioned. The Glorious Revolution was the foundation for creating a pluralistic society, and it built on and accelerated a process of political centralization. It created the world’s first set of inclusive political institutions.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

Extractive institutions are so common in history because they have a powerful logic: they can generate some limited prosperity while at the same time distributing it into the hands of a small elite. For this growth to happen, there must be political centralization. Once this is in place, the state—or the elite controlling the state—typically has incentives to invest and generate wealth, encourage others to invest so that the state can extract resources from them, and even mimic some of the processes that would normally be set in motion by inclusive economic institutions and markets.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 149
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

The Romans inherited some basic technologies, iron tools and weapons, literacy, plow agriculture, and building techniques. Early on in the Republic, they created others: cement masonry, pumps, and the water wheel. But thereafter, technology was stagnant throughout the period of the Roman Empire. […] There could be some economic growth without innovation, relying on existing technology, but it was growth without creative destruction. And it did not last.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 170
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

The process of political centralization can actually lead to a form of absolutism, as the king and his associates can crush other powerful groups in society. This is indeed one of the reasons why there will be opposition against state centralization, as we saw in chapter 3. However, in opposition to this force, the centralization of state institutions can also mobilize demand for a nascent form of pluralism, as it did in Tudor England. When the barons and local elites recognize that political power will be increasingly more centralized and that this process is hard to stop, they will make demands to have a say in how this centralized power is used. […] The Tudor project not only initiated political centralization, one pillar of inclusive institutions, but also indirectly contributed to pluralism, the other pillar of inclusive institutions.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 186-187
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

In England there was a long history of absolutist rule that was deeply entrenched and required a revolution to remove it. In the United States and Australia, there was no such thing. Though Lord Baltimore in Maryland and John Macarthur in New South Wales might have aspired to such a role, they could not establish a strong enough grip on society for their plans to bear fruit. The inclusive institutions established in the United States and Australia meant that the Industrial Revolution spread quickly to these lands and they began to get rich. The path these countries took was followed by colonies such as Canada and New Zealand.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 282
Explanation and Analysis:

The leaders of the French Revolution and, subsequently, Napoleon exported the revolution to these lands, destroying absolutism, ending feudal land relations, abolishing guilds, and imposing equality before the law—the all-important notion of rule of law, which we will discuss in greater detail in the next chapter. The French Revolution thus prepared not only France but much of the rest of Europe for inclusive institutions and the economic growth that these would spur.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker), Napoleon Bonaparte
Page Number: 291
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

The British example, an illustration of the virtuous circle of inclusive institutions, provides an example of a “gradual virtuous circle.” The political changes were unmistakably toward more inclusive political institutions and were the result of demands from empowered masses. But they were also gradual. Every decade another step, sometimes smaller, sometimes larger, was taken toward democracy. There was conflict over each step, and the outcome of each was contingent. But the virtuous circle created forces that reduced the stakes involved in clinging to power. […] There is great virtue in this sort of gradual change. It is less threatening to the elite than the wholesale overthrow of the system. Each step is small, and it makes sense to give in to a small demand rather than create a major showdown.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 317
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

There is much uncertainty. Cuba, for example, might transition toward inclusive institutions and experience a major economic transformation, or it may linger on under extractive political and economic institutions. The same is true of North Korea and Burma (Myanmar) in Asia. Thus, while our theory provides the tools for thinking about how institutions change and the consequences of such changes, the nature of this change—the role of small differences and contingency—makes more precise predictions difficult.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 436
Explanation and Analysis:

The rise of Brazil since the 1970s was not engineered by economists of international institutions instructing Brazilian policymakers on how to design better policies or avoid market failures. It was not achieved with injections of foreign aid. It was not the natural outcome of modernization. Rather, it was the consequence of diverse groups of people courageously building inclusive institutions. Eventually these led to more inclusive economic institutions. But the Brazilian transformation, like that of England in the seventeenth century, began with the creation of inclusive political institutions.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 457
Explanation and Analysis:

What is common among the political revolutions that successfully paved the way for more inclusive institutions and the gradual institutional changes in North America, in England in the nineteenth century, and in Botswana after independence—which also led to significant strengthening of inclusive political institutions—is that they succeeded in empowering a fairly broad cross-section of society. Pluralism, the cornerstone of inclusive political institutions, requires political power to be widely held in society, and starting from extractive institutions that vest power in a narrow elite, this requires a process of empowerment. This, as we emphasized in chapter 7, is what sets apart the Glorious Revolution from the overthrow of one elite by another.

Related Characters: Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (speaker)
Page Number: 458
Explanation and Analysis:
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Inclusive Political and Economic Institutions Term Timeline in Why Nations Fail

The timeline below shows where the term Inclusive Political and Economic Institutions appears in Why Nations Fail. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 3: The Making of Prosperity and Poverty
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Acemoglu and Robinson start the section “Extractive and Inclusive Economic Institutions ” by comparing the way teenagers grow up in North and South Korea. In the... (full context)
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South Korea’s system, like the US’s, is based on “inclusive economic institutions” that protect all citizens’ right to freely and fairly participate in whatever economic... (full context)
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In “Engines of Prosperity,” Acemoglu and Robinson expand on the benefits of inclusive economic institutions. In inclusive markets, people can choose their own occupations and pursue their own... (full context)
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...Institutions,” Acemoglu and Robinson argue that politics—society’s way of governing itself—determines whether a nation creates inclusive or extractive economic institutions. Absolutist political institutions, which concentrate unlimited power in the hands of... (full context)
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...pluralistic political institutions—which distribute power more broadly and put constraints on its exercise—tend to have inclusive economic institutions. However, the state also needs to be centralized and powerful enough to create... (full context)
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A similar feedback loop applies to inclusive institutions. Inclusive political institutions put limits on elites’ power, and this prevents them from restructuring... (full context)
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...section, entitled “Why Not Always Choose Prosperity?,” Acemoglu and Robinson ask why some societies create inclusive institutions, while most create extractive ones. Wouldn’t everyone want inclusive institutions? Not necessarily, they argue.... (full context)
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...off and spurred massive economic growth. Thus, powerful elites tend to oppose economic progress and inclusive economic institutions—and sometimes they succeed in blocking them. (full context)
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Elites also block inclusive political institutions. They generally oppose pluralism, which promises to decrease their power. Thus, they only... (full context)
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...because its political elite prefers to keep extracting wealth from the people, rather than building inclusive institutions and a centralized state. (full context)
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...1928 to the 1970s. Second, elites in extractive political institutions sometimes decide to create partially inclusive economic institutions—like South Korea’s leaders did from the 1960s until democracy was established in 1992.... (full context)
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...can simply make economic institutions more extractive. For all these reasons, sustainable economic prosperity requires inclusive political institutions. (full context)
Chapter 4: Small Differences and Critical Junctures: The Weight of History
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...were similar before the plague, by 1600, they had seriously diverged: the West had developed inclusive economic institutions, while the East had developed extractive ones. The Black Death shows how critical... (full context)
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...Robinson explain how England started to grow rapidly in the 17th century because of its inclusive political institutions, which were a result of the English Civil War (1642-1651) and, in particular,... (full context)
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...Revolution. In countries like France, the Industrial Revolution caused political revolutions, which ushered in more inclusive political and economic institutions. In contrast, Latin America’s extractive colonial institutions have largely endured in... (full context)
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For similar reasons, Asian countries struggled to build inclusive institutions in the 19th century. Absolutist Chinese monarchies halted commerce as soon as creative destruction... (full context)
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...to a variety of situations, and show how some countries have managed to build more inclusive institutions. (full context)
Chapter 5: “I’ve Seen the Future, and It Works”: Growth Under Extractive Institutions
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...achieve some economic growth. However, this growth is based on existing technologies, while growth in inclusive societies is based on technological change. (full context)
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...society. But Natufian society didn’t create long-term prosperity, since its institutions were extractive instead of inclusive, meaning that they likely promoted infighting among elites. (full context)
Chapter 6: Drifting Apart
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...“possibly the richest place in the world” by trading with growing European empires and building inclusive economic institutions. Its prosperity depended on legal innovations like the commenda system, in which wealthy investors funded... (full context)
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...evolve in the same direction—instead, institutional change is unpredictable and reversible. In Venice, elites overthrew inclusive institutions and established extractive ones. Similarly, during the Roman Empire and the Middle Ages, Britain... (full context)
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...Empire greatly influenced Europe’s political and economic development. Its institutions, like Venice’s, started out highly inclusive but became more and more extractive over time, especially as the Roman Republic gave way... (full context)
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...of their own, Tiberius Gracchus, in 133 BC Rome was a republic with a relatively inclusive political system. Citizens elected their magistrates, who faced significant checks and balances on their power.... (full context)
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...(or Augustus Caesar) formally created the absolutist Roman Empire, which gradually destroyed the Republic’s somewhat inclusive political institutions. (full context)
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...Because of these precedents, when feudalism collapsed in Europe, society became much more pluralistic and inclusive. (full context)
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...extractive ones in their place. Still, these societies left behind particular feudal structures that helped inclusive institutions form centuries later in places like Britain. (full context)
Chapter 7: The Turning Point
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...conclude that England fueled the Industrial Revolution because its political and economic institutions were more inclusive than anywhere else in the world. Specifically, the Glorious Revolution made its political system inclusive,... (full context)
Chapter 8: Not on Our Turf: Barriers to Development
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...fear it will take away their power. It threatens leaders because it can create more inclusive institutions (like in the 1400s in Britain), but it also threatens less powerful elites because... (full context)
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...Russia, and Austria-Hungary couldn’t take advantage of the Industrial Revolution because they didn’t share England’s inclusive institutions. The Austro-Hungarian Empire, which was run by the House of Habsburg, was extremely absolutist.... (full context)
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...“The Children of Samaale,” Acemoglu and Robinson argue that a lack of state centralization prevented inclusive institutions from forming in much of Africa. As a case study, they look at Somalia,... (full context)
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Because of its collective decision-making practices, Somalia was historically pluralistic, but its institutions weren’t inclusive because there was no centralized state to impose order or guarantee property rights. As such,... (full context)
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...absolutist rulers who fear creative destruction, or a lack of political centralization. But societies with inclusive institutions, or where citizens challenge absolutism, manage to set off explosive economic growth. Again, then,... (full context)
Chapter 9: Reversing Development
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...this colonial violence, Acemoglu and Robinson suggest, Southeast Asian states might have become prosperous and inclusive. But it’s impossible to know. This chapter is about how European colonialism “sowed the seeds... (full context)
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...societies and created highly extractive institutions in their place, which prevented those societies from building inclusive institutions. The Dutch did this in Indonesia, and the British did this in India—after the... (full context)
Chapter 10: The Diffusion of Prosperity
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...economic rights, including land once their sentences were up. In other words, the soldiers created inclusive institutions, which allowed convicts like Henry Cable, who was illiterate, to create businesses and build... (full context)
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...guilds monopolize certain trades. Eventually, France dismantled the monarchy and built the same kind of inclusive parliamentary system as England. (full context)
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...Bonaparte took control of France and conquered much of Europe. But eventually, France developed the inclusive political institutions long promised by the Revolution. This soon spread to the rest of Europe. (full context)
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...and guilds—throughout all of the territories he conquered. By exporting the French Revolution, he made inclusive institutions and economic growth possible throughout much of Europe. (full context)
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...French rule actually ended feudalism and absolutism in many parts of Europe, which later allowed inclusive economic institutions and industrialization to flourish. (full context)
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...goal was to restore the emperor to power, but they really wanted to build new, inclusive institutions. They took power in the Meiji Restoration, then defeated the Tokugawa family in a... (full context)
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...their argument in the last three chapters. England led the Industrial Revolution because of its inclusive institutions. Then, industrialization quickly spread to countries with similar institutions—including the US and Australia, but... (full context)
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Meanwhile, France built inclusive institutions during the French Revolution and exported them through military conquest. This allowed much of... (full context)
Chapter 11: The Virtuous Circle
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...used the rule of law as a key argument against absolutism. And once England created inclusive institutions, the rule of law reinforced itself in a virtuous circle. (full context)
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This explains why inclusive institutions tend to survive over time: most groups can’t participate in politics without pluralism and... (full context)
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...“The Slow March of Democracy,” Acemoglu and Robinson note that British democracy still wasn’t particularly inclusive in the 1700s—for instance, the vast majority of people still couldn’t vote. But “the virtuous... (full context)
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...colonies. Elites knew that choosing repression would mean abandoning the rule of law, pluralism, and inclusive economic institutions. They also knew that repression would probably fail, because inclusive institutions gave the... (full context)
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Britain’s economic institutions also became more inclusive during this period. For instance, Parliament repealed the Corn Laws, which had artificially increased prices... (full context)
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...and Robinson return to the United States. On the one hand, American institutions became more inclusive during the 19th century. On the other, during the same period, men like Cornelius Vanderbilt,... (full context)
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Acemoglu and Robinson reiterate that markets aren’t automatically inclusive—instead, they have to “create a level playing field and economic opportunities for the majority.” While... (full context)
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The story of Roosevelt’s failed attempt to pack the Supreme Court shows how inclusive institutions “resist attempts to undermine their own continuation.” While Roosevelt’s allies in Congress would have... (full context)
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...has been stuck in a vicious circle, not a virtuous one. In contrast, the US’s inclusive institutions have kept the Supreme Court independent. (full context)
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...Robinson conclude this chapter with “Positive Feedback and Virtuous Circles.” They argue that societies create inclusive institutions at critical junctures, when elites fail to protect their power. But after creating them,... (full context)
Chapter 12: The Vicious Circle
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...British colonial mining policies in Sierra Leone and Australia exemplify the difference between extractive and inclusive institutions. In Sierra Leone, the British gave a single company a monopoly over diamond mining... (full context)
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...than the North. The Civil War forced the South to change, but instead of building inclusive institutions, it maintained its extractive ones through Jim Crow segregation. Planter elites remained wealthy and... (full context)
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...the Glorious Revolution and French Revolution. These revolutions were unique. During both, businessmen pushed for inclusive economic institutions while broad coalitions of different groups pushed for inclusive political institutions. Meanwhile, England... (full context)
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...chapters under the heading “Negative Feedback and Vicious Circles.” Inclusive institutions tend to become more inclusive over time, in a virtuous circle. Pluralism checks abuses of power and creates inclusive economic... (full context)
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...instance, the Glorious Revolution and the Meiji Restoration were led by broad coalitions that wanted inclusive institutions. But revolutions in Ethiopia and Sierra Leone were led by narrow factions uninterested in... (full context)
Chapter 13: Why Nations Fail Today
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...lenient laws against paramilitaries. Overall, Acemoglu and Robinson note that, while Colombia is becoming more inclusive, many aspects of the vicious circle still apply to it. Namely, its political institutions incentivize... (full context)
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...countries, in reality, its institutions are very similar: they are democratic, but not pluralistic or inclusive. Centuries of extractive institutions have encouraged voters to choose more extreme candidates (even if they’re... (full context)
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...vicious circle since the 19th century. Fixing failed nations requires breaking the circle and creating inclusive institutions in place of extractive ones. This is extremely difficult, but it’s possible. For instance,... (full context)
Chapter 14: Breaking the Mold
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...over time. Ultimately, the Tswana chiefs’ lobbying efforts were successful in part because of their inclusive and centralized state institutions. (full context)
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...it grew extremely fast and is now sub-Saharan Africa’s wealthiest country. It succeeded by building inclusive institutions. Politically, Botswana is a democracy with regular elections and no armed conflict. Economically, its... (full context)
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...diverse country, the government defines everyone as ethnically Tswana. In short, Botswana chose to build inclusive political institutions upon independence, which allowed it to create inclusive economic institutions and achieve sustained... (full context)
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...rights, blocked employment discrimination, and gave Black citizens far better economic opportunities. By building these inclusive institutions, the South has nearly caught up to the North economically. (full context)
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...vice-premier Deng Xiaoping, who opposed the Cultural Revolution and hoped to spur economic growth through inclusive institutions and international commerce. First, the acting premier Hua Guofeng sided with Deng and arrested... (full context)
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...and it embraced foreign investment. While China’s political institutions remained extractive, its economic ones became inclusive enough to generate explosive growth for several decades. (full context)
Chapter 15: Understanding Prosperity and Poverty
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...successful and failed states. It does this in two ways: first, through the concept of inclusive and extractive institutions, and second, by explaining why people created inclusive institutions in certain times... (full context)
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Extractive political and economic institutions reinforce each other in a vicious circle, while inclusive ones do the same in a virtuous circle. These circles are strong, but not unbreakable.... (full context)
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...up poorer than the US and Western Europe. Instead, it’s poorer because European colonialism created inclusive institutions in the US and Western Europe, but extractive ones in Peru. But this could... (full context)
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...of the future is contingent. For example, Cuba, North Korea, and Myanmar could become more inclusive, or they could stay highly extractive and absolutist. (full context)
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...countries, depending on their institutions. Moreover, there’s no easy formula for turning extractive institutions into inclusive ones. Often, these attempts can fizzle out or backfire because of the vicious circle. However,... (full context)
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While Chinese economic institutions have become much more inclusive, they’re still essentially extractive. There’s little innovation: China’s tech boom is based on copying existing... (full context)
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As China’s economy has grown, its political institutions have actually become less inclusive, pluralistic, and democratic. For instance, the government closely controls the Internet and represses dissent. China’s... (full context)
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...standards, especially if the Communist Party stays in power. It could also switch to more inclusive institutions and continue growing, but this seems unlikely. (full context)
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...stage” on the road to modernization. These modernization theorists think growth automatically creates democracy and inclusive institutions. But there are plenty of counterexamples to this pattern, including China and Iraq. In... (full context)
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...foreign aid to spur growth and should direct it to programs that make institutions more inclusive. (full context)
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In the 1970s, Brazil overcame dictatorship and built inclusive institutions through broad coalitions like the Workers’ Party—not through clever policies, foreign aid, or modernization.... (full context)
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In conclusion, Acemoglu and Robinson admit that there’s no formula for empowering citizens or creating inclusive institutions. Centralization, existing pluralistic institutions, and community organizations can all help empower people. In particular,... (full context)