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THE ROLE OF POLITICAL AND INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS ON ECONOMIC FREEDOM: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM PMG ARDL MODEL ESTIMATION

Yıl 2022, Cilt: 6 Sayı: 1, 83 - 94, 30.03.2022

Öz

This study focuses on investigating the political and institutional factors that impact economic freedom. The factors addressed for the study are those that have resulted in disputed outcomes in prior works— but have not been evaluated holistically. Using annual data collected from 2003 to 2017, a panel ARDL technique was performed for 17 nations to examine both the short-run and long-run impact of political and institutional factors. The results of the study suggest that government effectiveness and political stability have a favorable impact on economic freedom, but government size is not. Furthermore, the study shows that corruption has a detrimental impact on economic freedom. The most likely answer is that corruption is not grease for the economic system’s wheels. Surprisingly, the findings suggest that democracy has a negative influence on economic freedom. Hence, as a policy implication, there is a necessity to improve institutions’ effectiveness, reduce government size and provide political stability to construct economic freedom on economies.

Kaynakça

  • Baltagi, B. H., Griffin, J. M., & Xiong, W. (2000). To pool or not to pool: Homogeneous versus heterogeneous estimators applied to cigarette demand. Review of Economics and Statistics, 82(1), 117-126.
  • Barr, N. (1992). Economic theory and the welfare state: a survey and interpretation. Journal of Economic Literature, 30(2), 741-803.
  • Bengoa, M., & Sanchez-Robles, B. (2003). Foreign direct investment, economic freedom and growth: new evidence from Latin America. European Journal of Political economy, 19(3), 529-545.
  • Bergh, A., & Erlingsson, G. Ó. (2009). Liberalization without retrenchment: understanding the consensus on Swedish welfare state reforms. Scandinavian Political Studies, 32(1), 71-93.
  • Bergh, A. (2020). Hayekian welfare states: Explaining the coexistence of economic freedom and big government. Journal of Institutional Economics, 16(1), 1-12.
  • Billger, S. M., & Goel, R. K. (2009). Do existing corruption levels matter in controlling corruption? Crosscountry quantile regression estimates. Journal of Development Economics, 90(2), 299-305.
  • Bjørnskov, C. (2016). Economic freedom and economic crises. European Journal of Political Economy, 45, 11-23.
  • Bliss, C., & Tella, R. D. (1997). Does competition kill corruption? Journal of Political Economy, 105(5), 1001- 1023.
  • Breitung, J. (2001). The local power of some unit root tests for panel data’. Nonstationary Panels, Panel Cointegration, and Dynamic Panels (Advances in Econometrics, Volume 15). Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 161-177.
  • Busse, M., & Gröning, S. (2013). The resource curse revisited: governance and natural resources. Public Choice, 154(1-2), 1-20.
  • Choi, I. (2001). “Unit root tests for panel data,” Journal of International Money and Finance, 20: 249–272. Compton, R. A., Giedeman, D. C., & Hoover, G. A. (2014). A distributional analysis of the benefits of economic freedom. European Journal of Political Economy, 33, 121-133.
  • De Angelis, I., De Blasio, G., & Rizzica, L. (2018). On the unintended effects of public transfers: evidence from EU funding to Southern Italy. Bank of Italy Temi di Discussione (Working Paper) No, 1180.
  • De Haan, J., & Sturm, J. E. (2003). Does more democracy lead to greater economic freedom? New evidence for developing countries. European Journal of Political Economy, 19(3), 547-563.
  • Dutta, N., & Williamson, C. R. (2016). Aiding economic freedom: Exploring the role of political institutions. European Journal of Political Economy, 45, 24-38.
  • Gehring, K. (2013). Who benefits from economic freedom? Unraveling the effect of economic freedom on subjective well-being. World Development, 50, 74-90.
  • Gelb, A., Melo, M., Denizer, C., & Tenev, S. (1999). Circumstance and choice: The role of initial conditions and policies in transition economies. The World Bank.
  • Goldsmith, A. A. (1999). Slapping the grasping hand: Correlates of political corruption in emerging markets. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 58(4), 865-883.
  • Graafland, J. (2019). Economic freedom and corporate environmental responsibility: The role of small government and freedom from government regulation. Journal of Cleaner Production, 218, 250-258.
  • Graafland, J., & Noorderhaven, N. (2020). Culture and institutions: How economic freedom and long-term orientation interactively influence corporate social responsibility. Journal of International Business Studies, 1-10.
  • Graeff, P., & Mehlkop, G. (2003). The impact of economic freedom on corruption: different patterns for rich and poor countries. European Journal of Political Economy, 19(3), 605-620.
  • Goel, R. K., & Nelson, M. A. (2005). Economic freedom versus political freedom: cross‐country influences on corruption. Australian Economic Papers, 44(2), 121-133.
  • Hall, J., Levendis, J., & Scarcioffolo, A. R. (2020). The efficient corruption hypothesis and the dynamics between economic freedom, corruption, and national income. The Journal of Developing Areas, 54(3).
  • Heckelman, J. C. (2000). Economic freedom and economic growth: A short-run causal investigation. Journal of Applied Economics, 3(1), 71-91.
  • Huskinson, T., & Lawson, R. (2014). Clusters of economic freedom. Applied Economics Letters, 21(15), 1070- 1074.
  • Im, K. S., M. H. Pesaran, and Y. Shin (2003). “Testing for unit roots in heterogeneous panels,” Journal of Econometrics, 115, 53–74
  • Jia, S., & Zhou, Y. (2017). Economic Freedom and Government Efficiency: Recent Evidence from China(No. 17-26). Department of Economics, West Virginia University.
  • Johnson, J. P., & Lenartowicz, T. (1998). Culture, freedom and economic growth: do cultural values explain economic growth?, Journal of World Business, 33(4), 332-334.
  • Kapás, J., & Czeglédi, P. (2017). Institutions and policies of economic freedom: different effects on income and growth. Economia Politica, 34(2), 259-282.
  • Krieger, T., & Meierrieks, D. (2016). Political capitalism: The interaction between income inequality, economic freedom and democracy. European Journal of Political Economy, 45, 115-132.
  • Lipford, J. W., & Yandle, B. (2015). Determining Economic Freedom: Democracy, Political Competition, and the Wealth Preservation Struggle. Journal of Private Enterprise, 30(3).
  • Lundström, S. (2005). The effect of democracy on different categories of economic freedom. European Journal of Political Economy, 21(4), 967-980.
  • Luo, Y. (2014). Economic freedom, financial crisis and stock volatilities in emerging markets. International Journal of Financial Management, 4(1), 1-10.
  • Maddala, G. S. and Shaowen Wu (1999). “A comparative study of unit root tests with panel data and a new simple test,” Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 61, 631-652
  • March, R. J., Lyford, C., & Powell, B. (2017). Causes and barriers to increases in economic freedom. International Review of Economics, 64(1), 87-103.
  • Muslija, A., Satrovic, E., & Colakovic, N. (2019). Dynamic panel data analysis of the relationship between economic freedom and tourism. Çankırı Karatekin Üniversitesi İktisadi ve İdari Bilimler Fakültesi Dergisi, 9(2), 327-343.
  • Paldam, M. (2002). The cross-country pattern of corruption: economics, culture and the seesaw dynamics. European Journal of Political Economy, 18(2), 215-240.
  • Pesaran, M. H., & Smith, R. (1995). Estimating long-run relationships from dynamic heterogeneous panels. Journal of Econometrics, 68(1), 79-113.
  • Pesaran, M. H., & Shin, Y. (1998). An autoregressive distributed-lag modelling approach to cointegration analysis. Econometric Society Monographs, 31, 371-413.
  • Pesaran, M. H., Shin, Y., & Smith, R. J. (2001). Bounds testing approaches to the analysis of level relationships. Journal of applied econometrics, 16(3), 289-326.
  • Pitlik, H., & Rode, M. (2016). Free to choose? Economic freedom, relative income, and life control perceptions. International Journal of Wellbeing, 6(1).
  • Potrafke, N. (2010). Does government ideology influence deregulation of product markets? Empirical evidence from OECD countries. Public Choice, 143(1-2), 135-155.
  • Rode, M., & Gwartney, J. D. (2012). Does democratization facilitate economic liberalization?. European Journal of Political Economy, 28(4), 607-619.
  • Satrovic, E. (2018). Foreign Direct Investments Rely on Economic Freedom: Evidence from Longitudinal Data. In ICPESS (International Congress on Politic, Economic and Social Studies) (No. 5).
  • Satrovic, E. (2019). Moderatİng effect of economic freedom on the relationship between human capital and shadow economy. Trakya Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi, 21(1), 295-306.
  • Shen, C., & Williamson, J. B. (2005). Corruption, democracy, economic freedom, and state strength: A cross-national analysis. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 46(4), 327-345.
  • Stroup, M. D. (2007). Economic freedom, democracy, and the quality of life. World Development, 35(1), 52- 66. Tullock, G. (1967). The welfare costs of monopolies, tariffs and theft. Western Economic Journal, 5(2), 24-32.
  • Ul Haq, M. (2020). Foreign Aid, Political Institutions and Economic Freedom: Empirical Evidence from Selected Developing Countries Miraj ul Haq, Nuzhat Shamim and Muhammad Luqman. Lahore Journal of Economics, 25(1), 153-178.
  • World Bank. (2020a). World Development Indicators, General Government Final Consumption Expenditure (% of GDP). Retrieved 19 May 2020 from http://databank.worldbank.org/data.
  • World Bank (2020b). Worldwide Governance Indicators; World Bank: Washington, DC, USA. Available online: https://databank.worldbank.org/source/worldwide-governance-indicators (accessed on 23 May 2020).
  • Yamarik, S., & Redmon, C. (2017). Economic Freedom and Corruption: New Cross-Country Panel Data Evidence. Journal of Private Enterprise, 32(2).
  • Yıldız, B. F. (2020). Categorization of Qualifying Football Clubs for European Cups with Backpropagating Artificial Neural Networks. Journal of Soft Computing and Artificial Intelligence, 1(2), 92-99.
  • Yıldız, B. F., Hesami, S., Rjoub, H., & Wong, W. K. (2021). Interpretation of Oil Price Shocks On Macroeconomic Aggregates of South Africa: Evidence from SVAR. Journal of Contemporary Issues in Business and Government, 27(1), 279-287.
Yıl 2022, Cilt: 6 Sayı: 1, 83 - 94, 30.03.2022

Öz

Kaynakça

  • Baltagi, B. H., Griffin, J. M., & Xiong, W. (2000). To pool or not to pool: Homogeneous versus heterogeneous estimators applied to cigarette demand. Review of Economics and Statistics, 82(1), 117-126.
  • Barr, N. (1992). Economic theory and the welfare state: a survey and interpretation. Journal of Economic Literature, 30(2), 741-803.
  • Bengoa, M., & Sanchez-Robles, B. (2003). Foreign direct investment, economic freedom and growth: new evidence from Latin America. European Journal of Political economy, 19(3), 529-545.
  • Bergh, A., & Erlingsson, G. Ó. (2009). Liberalization without retrenchment: understanding the consensus on Swedish welfare state reforms. Scandinavian Political Studies, 32(1), 71-93.
  • Bergh, A. (2020). Hayekian welfare states: Explaining the coexistence of economic freedom and big government. Journal of Institutional Economics, 16(1), 1-12.
  • Billger, S. M., & Goel, R. K. (2009). Do existing corruption levels matter in controlling corruption? Crosscountry quantile regression estimates. Journal of Development Economics, 90(2), 299-305.
  • Bjørnskov, C. (2016). Economic freedom and economic crises. European Journal of Political Economy, 45, 11-23.
  • Bliss, C., & Tella, R. D. (1997). Does competition kill corruption? Journal of Political Economy, 105(5), 1001- 1023.
  • Breitung, J. (2001). The local power of some unit root tests for panel data’. Nonstationary Panels, Panel Cointegration, and Dynamic Panels (Advances in Econometrics, Volume 15). Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 161-177.
  • Busse, M., & Gröning, S. (2013). The resource curse revisited: governance and natural resources. Public Choice, 154(1-2), 1-20.
  • Choi, I. (2001). “Unit root tests for panel data,” Journal of International Money and Finance, 20: 249–272. Compton, R. A., Giedeman, D. C., & Hoover, G. A. (2014). A distributional analysis of the benefits of economic freedom. European Journal of Political Economy, 33, 121-133.
  • De Angelis, I., De Blasio, G., & Rizzica, L. (2018). On the unintended effects of public transfers: evidence from EU funding to Southern Italy. Bank of Italy Temi di Discussione (Working Paper) No, 1180.
  • De Haan, J., & Sturm, J. E. (2003). Does more democracy lead to greater economic freedom? New evidence for developing countries. European Journal of Political Economy, 19(3), 547-563.
  • Dutta, N., & Williamson, C. R. (2016). Aiding economic freedom: Exploring the role of political institutions. European Journal of Political Economy, 45, 24-38.
  • Gehring, K. (2013). Who benefits from economic freedom? Unraveling the effect of economic freedom on subjective well-being. World Development, 50, 74-90.
  • Gelb, A., Melo, M., Denizer, C., & Tenev, S. (1999). Circumstance and choice: The role of initial conditions and policies in transition economies. The World Bank.
  • Goldsmith, A. A. (1999). Slapping the grasping hand: Correlates of political corruption in emerging markets. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 58(4), 865-883.
  • Graafland, J. (2019). Economic freedom and corporate environmental responsibility: The role of small government and freedom from government regulation. Journal of Cleaner Production, 218, 250-258.
  • Graafland, J., & Noorderhaven, N. (2020). Culture and institutions: How economic freedom and long-term orientation interactively influence corporate social responsibility. Journal of International Business Studies, 1-10.
  • Graeff, P., & Mehlkop, G. (2003). The impact of economic freedom on corruption: different patterns for rich and poor countries. European Journal of Political Economy, 19(3), 605-620.
  • Goel, R. K., & Nelson, M. A. (2005). Economic freedom versus political freedom: cross‐country influences on corruption. Australian Economic Papers, 44(2), 121-133.
  • Hall, J., Levendis, J., & Scarcioffolo, A. R. (2020). The efficient corruption hypothesis and the dynamics between economic freedom, corruption, and national income. The Journal of Developing Areas, 54(3).
  • Heckelman, J. C. (2000). Economic freedom and economic growth: A short-run causal investigation. Journal of Applied Economics, 3(1), 71-91.
  • Huskinson, T., & Lawson, R. (2014). Clusters of economic freedom. Applied Economics Letters, 21(15), 1070- 1074.
  • Im, K. S., M. H. Pesaran, and Y. Shin (2003). “Testing for unit roots in heterogeneous panels,” Journal of Econometrics, 115, 53–74
  • Jia, S., & Zhou, Y. (2017). Economic Freedom and Government Efficiency: Recent Evidence from China(No. 17-26). Department of Economics, West Virginia University.
  • Johnson, J. P., & Lenartowicz, T. (1998). Culture, freedom and economic growth: do cultural values explain economic growth?, Journal of World Business, 33(4), 332-334.
  • Kapás, J., & Czeglédi, P. (2017). Institutions and policies of economic freedom: different effects on income and growth. Economia Politica, 34(2), 259-282.
  • Krieger, T., & Meierrieks, D. (2016). Political capitalism: The interaction between income inequality, economic freedom and democracy. European Journal of Political Economy, 45, 115-132.
  • Lipford, J. W., & Yandle, B. (2015). Determining Economic Freedom: Democracy, Political Competition, and the Wealth Preservation Struggle. Journal of Private Enterprise, 30(3).
  • Lundström, S. (2005). The effect of democracy on different categories of economic freedom. European Journal of Political Economy, 21(4), 967-980.
  • Luo, Y. (2014). Economic freedom, financial crisis and stock volatilities in emerging markets. International Journal of Financial Management, 4(1), 1-10.
  • Maddala, G. S. and Shaowen Wu (1999). “A comparative study of unit root tests with panel data and a new simple test,” Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 61, 631-652
  • March, R. J., Lyford, C., & Powell, B. (2017). Causes and barriers to increases in economic freedom. International Review of Economics, 64(1), 87-103.
  • Muslija, A., Satrovic, E., & Colakovic, N. (2019). Dynamic panel data analysis of the relationship between economic freedom and tourism. Çankırı Karatekin Üniversitesi İktisadi ve İdari Bilimler Fakültesi Dergisi, 9(2), 327-343.
  • Paldam, M. (2002). The cross-country pattern of corruption: economics, culture and the seesaw dynamics. European Journal of Political Economy, 18(2), 215-240.
  • Pesaran, M. H., & Smith, R. (1995). Estimating long-run relationships from dynamic heterogeneous panels. Journal of Econometrics, 68(1), 79-113.
  • Pesaran, M. H., & Shin, Y. (1998). An autoregressive distributed-lag modelling approach to cointegration analysis. Econometric Society Monographs, 31, 371-413.
  • Pesaran, M. H., Shin, Y., & Smith, R. J. (2001). Bounds testing approaches to the analysis of level relationships. Journal of applied econometrics, 16(3), 289-326.
  • Pitlik, H., & Rode, M. (2016). Free to choose? Economic freedom, relative income, and life control perceptions. International Journal of Wellbeing, 6(1).
  • Potrafke, N. (2010). Does government ideology influence deregulation of product markets? Empirical evidence from OECD countries. Public Choice, 143(1-2), 135-155.
  • Rode, M., & Gwartney, J. D. (2012). Does democratization facilitate economic liberalization?. European Journal of Political Economy, 28(4), 607-619.
  • Satrovic, E. (2018). Foreign Direct Investments Rely on Economic Freedom: Evidence from Longitudinal Data. In ICPESS (International Congress on Politic, Economic and Social Studies) (No. 5).
  • Satrovic, E. (2019). Moderatİng effect of economic freedom on the relationship between human capital and shadow economy. Trakya Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi, 21(1), 295-306.
  • Shen, C., & Williamson, J. B. (2005). Corruption, democracy, economic freedom, and state strength: A cross-national analysis. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 46(4), 327-345.
  • Stroup, M. D. (2007). Economic freedom, democracy, and the quality of life. World Development, 35(1), 52- 66. Tullock, G. (1967). The welfare costs of monopolies, tariffs and theft. Western Economic Journal, 5(2), 24-32.
  • Ul Haq, M. (2020). Foreign Aid, Political Institutions and Economic Freedom: Empirical Evidence from Selected Developing Countries Miraj ul Haq, Nuzhat Shamim and Muhammad Luqman. Lahore Journal of Economics, 25(1), 153-178.
  • World Bank. (2020a). World Development Indicators, General Government Final Consumption Expenditure (% of GDP). Retrieved 19 May 2020 from http://databank.worldbank.org/data.
  • World Bank (2020b). Worldwide Governance Indicators; World Bank: Washington, DC, USA. Available online: https://databank.worldbank.org/source/worldwide-governance-indicators (accessed on 23 May 2020).
  • Yamarik, S., & Redmon, C. (2017). Economic Freedom and Corruption: New Cross-Country Panel Data Evidence. Journal of Private Enterprise, 32(2).
  • Yıldız, B. F. (2020). Categorization of Qualifying Football Clubs for European Cups with Backpropagating Artificial Neural Networks. Journal of Soft Computing and Artificial Intelligence, 1(2), 92-99.
  • Yıldız, B. F., Hesami, S., Rjoub, H., & Wong, W. K. (2021). Interpretation of Oil Price Shocks On Macroeconomic Aggregates of South Africa: Evidence from SVAR. Journal of Contemporary Issues in Business and Government, 27(1), 279-287.
Toplam 52 adet kaynakça vardır.

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil İngilizce
Konular Ekonomi
Bölüm Makaleler
Yazarlar

Bünyamin Fuat Yıldız Bu kişi benim 0000-0001-7238-1541

Erken Görünüm Tarihi 25 Mart 2022
Yayımlanma Tarihi 30 Mart 2022
Yayımlandığı Sayı Yıl 2022 Cilt: 6 Sayı: 1

Kaynak Göster

APA Yıldız, B. F. (2022). THE ROLE OF POLITICAL AND INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS ON ECONOMIC FREEDOM: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM PMG ARDL MODEL ESTIMATION. Journal of Research in Economics, 6(1), 83-94.