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International influence on regime change and democratization

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Title: International influence on regime change and democratization


1
International influence on regime change and
democratization
  • Roberto Bonfatti
  • March 2006

2
1a - Motivations
  • No formal theory of the economic motivations
    underlying international influence on regime
    change and democratization in developing
    countries.
  • Plenty of historical evidence suggesting that
    such influence economic, diplomatic and
    military is strong
  • Support to coups against democracy e.g. Iran
    (US, 1953), Guatemala (US, 1954), Chile (US,
    1973).
  • Support to counter-insurgence efforts e.g.
    Guatemala (US, 1960s and 1970s), Nicaragua (US,
    1960s and 1970s), East African Mutinies (Britain,
    1964), Cameroon (France, 1960s), Gabon (France,
    1960s), Congo-Brazzaville (France, 1968),Chad
    (France, 1968-1972), Congo (several countries,
    1970s), Rwanda (France, 1990).
  • Support to insurgence efforts e.g. Ethiopia
    (Cuba and USSR, 1972-1975), Congo-Brazzaville
    (France, 1997).
  • Selective support to democratization e.g. NO
    SUPPORT Latin America (US, 1970s), Nigeria (US
    1990s). SUPPORT Latin America (US, 1980s), Iraq
    and Middle East (US, 1990 - ).
  • Selective support to electoral campaigns e.g.
    Chile (US, Christian Democrat 1964), Cameroon
    (France, 1992), Benin (France, 1996).

3
1b - Motivations
  • Many empirical works in political science and
    economics find that international aid depends on
    strategic considerations
  • If international aid affects regime change,
    donors should be included as strategic players in
    models of regime change and democratization.

4
2 - Research question
  • What are the economic motivations underlying
    international influence on regime change and
    democratization in developing countries?

5
3a Related literature
  • Democratization
  • Work by political scientists
  • International Security Liberalism, or
    Wilsonianism (e.g. Smith 1994, 2000)
    democratization as a foreign policy goal.
    Motivation to foster international political
    stability.
  • Polyarchy us democracy promotion (Dahl, 1971
    Robinson, 2000)
  • Recent work by economists
  • Acemoglu and Robinson (2004) analyse the impact
    of free trade and free capital movements on
    democratization through their impact on the
    income distribution. They do not include in their
    model foreign agents behaving strategically.
  • International aid
  • Boschini and Olofsgard (forth. JDS) find a
    negative differential impact of 1989 on
    international aid for countries that were
    strategically important before 1989.
  • Alesina and Dollar (JEG 2000) find that
    strategic considerations (colonial past, UN
    voting behaviour) are a key positive determinants
    of foreign aid allocation. Democracy has also a
    positive marginal effect.
  • A voluminous, older literature points in the same
    direction (see for example Schraeder, Hook and
    Taylor, 1998 Maizels and Nissanke, 1984).

6
3b Related literature
  • Domestic determinants of international relations
  • Putnam (1989) two-level game of international
    relations and domestic politics does not
    investigate the possibility that governments
    influence each others domestic politics to
    obtain a higher bargaining power
  • International trade relations Grossman and
    Helpman (JPE 1995, AER 1995)
  • Hagan (1989, 1993) study the effect of political
    regime change on international alliances (UN
    voting patterns) and foreign policy behaviour
    (CREON).
  • Richardson (1976, 1978) study the importance of
    economic dependence for international alliances
    (UN voting patterns).
  • Dependency School (Frank, 1967 Dos Santos, AER
    1970s Furtado Marini)
  • Nationalization and international relations
  • Sigmund (1980) on the politics of
    nationalization in Latin America
  • Krasner (1978) on raw materials investments and
    US foreign policy

7
4 - Summary of contribution
  • Simple extension of Acemoglu and Robinson (2004)
    to start analysing external influence on regime
    change and democratization.
  • Point to some possible directions for future
    research

8
5 - Model
  • Agents, income and domestic policy
  • Two domestic agents, R and P, and one foreign
    agent, F. There are two sources of
    redistributable income in the economy a tax
    on foreign direct investments ( ), and
    foreign aid ( ). Domestic policy sets the
    shares of income for R and P

9
Foreign policy
  • There is a binary alliance decision ( ) ally
    ( ) or ennemy ( ) of F. The
    ruling domestic agent and F can bargain over
    and only if .

10
Payoffs
  • The payoffs of the three agents are
  • where the are exogenous payoffs to the
    agents from their allignment decision, and
    is the geopolitical value of the alliance for F.
  • Define

11
Assumptions
  • there are gains from bargaining over
    and
  • , and
    both agents prefer to be allies of F, but Rs
    preference is stronger.
  • the joint welfare
    of F and the ruling agent is increasing in ,
    independently on who is the ruler.
  • are non re-distributable.

12
Negotiations
  • Given assumption 1 and 3, it always in the
    interest of the two parties to agree on the
    foreign policy
  • (I am also assuming that F has all the bargaining
    power in the negotiations).

13
Political game
  • At the beginning of the game, R is in power
    (state N). P can size power at a cost .
  • The timing of the game is
  • The cost of revolution ( ) is revealed
  • R and F negotiate foreign policy ( ), aid (
    ) and taxes ( )
  • R decides whether to transfer power to P (state
    D) if he doesnt, he promise transfer to
    agent P.
  • P decides whether to stage a revolution or not
    (state RR)
  • If P has gone to power, P and F negotiate foreign
    policy, aid and taxes, and P sets domestic
    policy otherwise, R can change the domestic
    policy with probability 1 p.
  • All the payoffs are realized.

µ
14
Time 5
  • If R is in power, he can reset domestic policy
    with probability 1 p in this case, he sets
  • If P is in power he negotiates and with
    F. This leads to

15
Time 4
  • If P is in power, he stages a revolution iff
  • Define
  • that is, the level of cost above which there is
    no revolutionary threat.

16
Time 3
  • there is no revolutionary threat,
    thus .
  • there is a
    revolutionary threat, but agent P staves it off
    by setting
  • there is a revolutionary
    threat, and R staves it off by transferring power
    to P (D 1).

17
Time 2
  • there is no revolutionary threat,
    and F sets .
  • there is
    a revolutionary threat, but R is able to stave it
    off even if F does not increase aid. Thus, F sets
  • there is a revolutionary threat and
    Fs aid offer determines whether R has to hand in
    power to P or not. The maximum that F is willing
    to concede to prevent P from going to power is
    . Define

18
Time 1
  • Depending on the value of , we have four
    different cases




19
6 Remarks
  • From Fs point of view
  • The agent with the higher stake in the alliance
    should be in power
  • But if such a stake is perfectly
    re-distributable, F is indifferent between the
    two parties.
  • Provided that R can renegotiate domestic policy
    more more easily than can F renegotiate foreign
    policy
  • in case of a revolutionary threat, Fs emergency
    aid is only imperfectly converted into
    redistribution to P
  • When the revolutionary threat is strong enough, F
    prefers to allow P to power rather than paying
    emergency aid to R
  • For some range of µ, the expected income of P
    (and therefore, expected corruption in the
    allocation of international aid) is decreasing in
    the revolutionary threat.

20
P in power
R in power
21
x is higher than when
x
x
22
7 Future directions?
  • Trade model
  • Competition between superpowers?

23
Polity IV Democracy Index, averages
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