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Book Chapter
Institutional Change and Institutional Persistence
Author(s)
In this essay, we provide a simple conceptual framework to elucidate the
forces that lead to institutional persistence and change. Our framework is
based on a dynamic game between different groups, who care both about
current policies and institutions and future policies, which are themselves
determined by current institutional choices, and clarifies the forces that
lead to the most extreme form of institutional persistence
("institutional stasis") and the
potential drivers of institutional change. We further study the strategic
stability of institutions, which arises when institutions persist because of
fear of subsequent, less beneficial changes that would follow initial
reforms. More importantly, we emphasize that, despite the popularity of
ideas based on institutional stasis in the economics and political science
literatures, most institutions are in a constant state of flux, but their
trajectory may still be shaped by past institutional choices, thus
exhibiting "path-dependent change", so
that initial conditions determine both the subsequent trajectories of
institutions and how they respond to shocks. We conclude the essay by
discussing how institutions can be designed to bolster stability, the
relationship between social mobility and institutions, and the interplay
between culture and institutions.
Date Published:
2021
Citations:
Acemoglu, Daron, Georgy Egorov, Konstantin Sonin. 2021. Institutional Change and Institutional Persistence.