Guest guest Posted December 5, 2004 Report Share Posted December 5, 2004 indicjournalists, "gargsam" <gargsam> wrote: This research paper by Prof. Lakshmi Iyer, Harvard Business School, Boston MA October 2004 examines the long term impact of colonialism, quite apart from the excessive rent-seekling extraction by the british. Here is the conclusion: In this paper, I compare long-run outcomes of areas in India which were under direct British colonial rule with areas which were ruled indirectly, using an exogenous source of variation to control for selection of states into the British empire. The instrumental variable results indicate that the British selectively annexed areas based on agricultural potential, and that British-ruled areas lag behind in the availability of public goods in the post-Independence period. These differences are narrowing revenue was the biggest source of revenue, both for British India and for the native states. See Banerjee and Iyer (2003) for evidence that historical land revenue systems caused persistent differences in outcomes within British India. The regression needs to be interpreted with caution since we do not have data on the systems pursued in all native states. Also the adoption of a particular institution by a native ruler might be correlated with other dimensions of policy. District-level government expenditure data are not publicly available to the best of my knowledge. over time, and so probably reflect differences from the colonial period. Given that the results cannot be wholly attributed to excessive extraction by the British or to differences in specific institutions, they are probably due to differences in the incentives faced by the administrators in the two types of areas. The policy implications of the results differ depending on the motives we ascribe to native rulers. For instance, if it is the case that native rulers were able to pursue better policies because of their superior local knowledge or because they felt a greater commitment to the progress of their area, policies aimed at increasing decentralization or grass-roots democracy (like the village-level Panchayati Raj system in India) would be expected to result in better public goods provision. If native rulers had a longer horizon than administrators in British areas (because they did not have any term limits or could bequeath the state to their descendants), then the policy implications call for developing long-term relationships between policy-makers or administrators and the people. Alternatively, if the fear of being deposed was the major reason for better performance, the policy implication would be to provide for better monitoring and greater punishments for policy-makers and administrators. It is interesting that we observe significant differences for as long as forty years after the end of colonial rule, which may be due to the continued prominence of former princes in political life. This implies that the effect of a history of colonialism can last for a very long time, though it may eventually disappear. http://mauricio.econ.ubc.ca/pdfs/iyer.pdf --- End forwarded message --- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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