Inequality and Governance

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A01=Andreas P. Kyriacou
Author_Andreas P. Kyriacou
behavioural economics research
Category=JBFA
Category=JPP
Category=KCP
Contemporary Societies
corruption control strategies
Country's Legal Origin
Country’s Legal Origin
cross-country empirical analysis
cultural determinants policy
cultural traits
economic inequality
economic inequality governance impact
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnic Inequalities
Gdp Pc
Higher Economic Inequalities
Impartial Governance
inequality-governance relationship
Ingroup Bias
Ingroup Favouritism
Ingroup Ties
Interpersonal Inequalities
Low Corruption Countries
Nelson Mandela
Net Income Inequality
OLS Estimate
OLS Regression
Patron Client Politics
Public Administration
public administration theory
Q1 Ratio
Real Gdp
Realistic Group Conflict Theory
Robert Vishny
Social Dominance Orientation
social psychologists
social psychology experiments
Socialist Legal Origin
Suitable Instrumental Variable
World Bank's World Governance
World Bank’s World Governance

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367777678
  • Weight: 330g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Governance matters for social welfare. Better governed countries are richer, happier and have fewer social and environmental problems. Good governance implies that public sector agents act impartially. It manifests itself in the form of equality before the law, an independent and professional public administration and the control of corruption.

This book considers how economic inequality – both interpersonal and interethnic – can affect the quality of governance. To this end, it brings together insights from three different perspectives. First, a long-run historical one that exploits anthropological data on pre-industrial societies. Second, based on experimental work conducted by social psychologists and behavioural economists. Third, through cross-country empirical analysis drawn from a large sample of contemporary societies.

The long-run perspective relates the inequality-governance relationship to societal responses in the face of uncertainty – responses that persist today in the guise of cultural traits that vary across countries. The experimental evidence deepens our understanding of human behaviour in unequal settings and in different governance contexts. Together, the long-run perspective and the experimental evidence help inform the cross-country analysis of the impact of economic inequality on governance. This analysis suggests the importance of both economic inequality and culture for the quality of governance and yields several policy implications.

Andreas P. Kyriacou is Professor of Economics at the Universitat de Girona (Spain). Over the years, he has worked on a range of research topics mostly from the perspective of Institutional Economics. These include federalism and decentralisation, non-economic motives driving individual behaviour and, more recently, the causes and consequences of government quality.

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