"freedom"

Michael McIntyre mmcintyr at depaul.edu
Sat May 4 13:53:01 PDT 2002


The sad part is that this nonsense could now be published in any of the major political science journals and no one (perestroikists aside) would think it amiss.

Michael McIntyre


>>> dhenwood at panix.com 05/04/02 15:15 PM >>>
Ah, it's beautiful when economists try to think politically...


>"The Guarantees of Freedom"
>
> BY: RAFAEL LA PORTA
> Harvard University
> Department of Economics
> National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
> FLORENCIO LOPEZ-DE-SILANES
> Yale University
> International Institute of Corporate Governance
> National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
> CRISTIAN POP-ELECHES
> Harvard University
> Department of Economics
> ANDREI SHLEIFER
> Harvard University
> Department of Economics
> National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
>
>Document: Available from the SSRN Electronic Paper Collection:
> http://papers.ssrn.com/paper.taf?abstract_id=297145
>
>Paper ID: Yale ICF Working Paper No. 02-05
> Date: January 2002
>
> Contact: ANDREI SHLEIFER
> Email: Mailto:ashleifer at harvard.edu
> Postal: Harvard University
> Department of Economics
> Room M-9
> Littauer Center
> Cambridge, MA 02138 UNITED STATES
> Phone: 617-495-5046
> Fax: 617-496-1708
> Co-Auth: RAFAEL LA PORTA
> Email: Mailto:rafael_laporta at harvard.edu
> Postal: Harvard University
> Department of Economics
> Room M7
> Littauer Center
> Cambridge, MA 02138 UNITED STATES
> Co-Auth: FLORENCIO LOPEZ-DE-SILANES
> Email: Mailto:florencio.lopezdesilanes at ale.edu
> Postal: Yale University
> International Institute of Corporate Governance
> Yale School of Management
> 135 Prospect Street
> New Haven, CT 06520 UNITED STATES
> Co-Auth: CRISTIAN POP-ELECHES
> Email: Mailto:eleches at fas.harvard.edu
> Postal: Harvard University
> Department of Economics
> Littauer Center
> Cambridge, MA 02138 UNITED STATES
>
>ABSTRACT:
> Hayek (1960) distinguishes the institutions of English freedom,
> which guarantee the independence of judges from political
> interference in the administration of justice, from those of
> American freedom, which allow judges to restrain law-making
> powers of the sovereign through constitutional review. We create
> a data base of constitutional rules in 71 countries that reflect
> these institutions of English and American freedom, and ask
> whether these rules predict economic and political freedom in a
> cross-section of countries. We find that the English
> institutions of judicial independence are strong predictors of
> economic freedom and weaker predictors of political freedom. The
> American institutions of checks and balances are strong
> predictors of political but not of economic freedom. Judicial
> independence explains half of the positive effect of common law
> legal origin on measures of economic freedom.



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