Economic Freedom and Economic Growth: A Short-Run Causal Investigation 论文

2000Journal of Applied Economics引用 256顶会
Corruption and Economic DevelopmentEconomic Growth and DevelopmentIncome, Poverty, and Inequality

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Journal of Applied Economics
发表日期
2000-05-01
发表年份
2000

关键词

Corruption and Economic DevelopmentEconomic Growth and DevelopmentIncome, Poverty, and Inequality

摘要

The freedom and growth literature has consistently shown that nations which have fewer restrictions on private agents and transactions tend to higher levels of economic growth. It is less clear, however, whether freedom causes growth, growth causes freedom, or the two are jointly determined. To assess these possibilities, Granger-causality tests are performed on annual freedom indicators developed by the Heritage Foundation and national growth rates. The underlying component indexes, which include Trade Policy, Taxation, Government Intervention, Monetary Policy, Capital Flows and Foreign Investment, Banking, Wage and Price Controls, Property Rights, Regulation, and Black Markets, are also tested in addition to the summary freedom rating. The tests suggest the average level of freedom in a nation, as well as many of the specific underlying components of freedom, precedes growth. However, growth may precede one of the component indexes (Government Intervention), and no relationship is found to exist between growth and two of the indexes (Trade Policy and Taxation).

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