2002
DOI: 10.1177/001041400203500103
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Polity IV, 1800-1999

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Cited by 1,086 publications
(1,289 citation statements)
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References 4 publications
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“…As possible determinants of programs, loans, and compliance, the initial regressions included a huge number of variables that have been suggested in the literature: the rate of monetary expansion, the overall budget deficit, general government consumption relative to GDP, real GDP growth, GDP per capita, the share of foreign short-term debt in total foreign debt, the total level of outstanding debt, total debt service (in percent of GDP), the rate of inflation, a country's international reserves (in months of imports), the current account balance as a percent of GDP, openness to trade (all World Bank data) and the LIBOR on three months credits to US banks (IMF 2003). I include the following political and social variables: the degree of democracy (Marshall and Jaggers 2000), a measure of political instability (Dreher 2002), 23 fractionalization of the legislature, proportional representation, a dummy for special interest governments, government ideological cohesion and the duration of the political regime (all from Beck et al 2001). All regressions also include a dummy for each individual country; where necessary an AR(1) term is included to correct for serial correlation.…”
Section: Methods and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As possible determinants of programs, loans, and compliance, the initial regressions included a huge number of variables that have been suggested in the literature: the rate of monetary expansion, the overall budget deficit, general government consumption relative to GDP, real GDP growth, GDP per capita, the share of foreign short-term debt in total foreign debt, the total level of outstanding debt, total debt service (in percent of GDP), the rate of inflation, a country's international reserves (in months of imports), the current account balance as a percent of GDP, openness to trade (all World Bank data) and the LIBOR on three months credits to US banks (IMF 2003). I include the following political and social variables: the degree of democracy (Marshall and Jaggers 2000), a measure of political instability (Dreher 2002), 23 fractionalization of the legislature, proportional representation, a dummy for special interest governments, government ideological cohesion and the duration of the political regime (all from Beck et al 2001). All regressions also include a dummy for each individual country; where necessary an AR(1) term is included to correct for serial correlation.…”
Section: Methods and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our main measure of democracy is the combined polity score from the Polity IV dataset (Marshall and Jaggers, 2008), rescaled between 0 (full autocracy) and 1 (full democracy). This widely-used index consists of underlying components capturing key characteristics of executive recruitment, constraints on executive authority, and the degree of political competition.…”
Section: Democracymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Secondly, we consider political freedom only and we build the non-politically free donor pool with those countries that between 1995 and 2010 show a Polity IV [Marshall, Jaggers, and Gurr 2012] DEMOC value equal to 0 in all the periods. Finally, we consider the 1989 shock as the trigger for a multi-dimensional transition, we include in the most stringent non-free donor pool those countries that are both non-economically and non-politically free.…”
Section: Methodology and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%