Counting Calories: Democracy and Distribution in the Developing World

How does regime type affect the poor? Are certain types of regimes better at translating economic growth into consumption for the world's least privileged citizens? We propose an alternative measure of transfers to the poor that is nearly universally available and innately captures distribution...

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Veröffentlicht in:International studies quarterly 2011-12, Vol.55 (4), p.887-908
Hauptverfasser: Blaydes, Lisa, Kayser, Mark Andreas
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description How does regime type affect the poor? Are certain types of regimes better at translating economic growth into consumption for the world's least privileged citizens? We propose an alternative measure of transfers to the poor that is nearly universally available and innately captures distribution: average daily calorie consumption. In sharp contrast to the consumption of material goods or the accumulation of wealth for which humans have shown no upper bound on their ability to achieve, biological limits make it impossible for a small number of individuals to consume most of a nation's calories. Democracies and hybrid regimes—which combine elements of autocracy and democracy—are better at translating economic growth into total calorie consumption than autocracies and perform strikingly similarly in this regard; democracies outperform both hybrid regimes and autocracies, however, in converting growth into higher quality calories from animal sources.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Political Science Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
subjects Accumulation
Animals
Autocracy
Bioenergetics
Calories
Citizens
Clientelism
Consumption
Datasets
Deadlines
Democracy
Democratization
Economic Development
Economic growth
Food consumption
Gross domestic product
Human capital
Illiberal democracy
Income inequality
Nutrition
Political regimes
Poverty
Social factors
Wealth
title Counting Calories: Democracy and Distribution in the Developing World
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