Limited Access Orders in the Developing World : A New Approach to the Problems of Development

The upper-income, advanced industrial countries of the world today all have market economies with open competition, competitive multi-party democratic political systems, and a secure government monopoly over violence. Such open access orders, however, are not the only norm and equilibrium type of society. The middle and low-income developing countries today, like all countries before about 1800, can be understood as limited access orders that maintain their equilibrium in a fundamentally different way. In limited access orders, the state does not have a secure monopoly on violence, and society organizes itself to control violence among the elite factions. A common feature of limited access orders is that political elites divide up control of the economy, each getting some share of the rents. Since outbreaks of violence reduce the rents, the elite factions have incentives to be peaceable most of the time. Adequate stability of the rents and thus of the social order requires limiting access and competition-hence a social order with a fundamentally different logic than the open access order. This paper lays out such a framework and explores some of its implications for the problems of development today.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: North, Douglass C., Wallis, John Joseph, Webb, Steven B., Weingast, Barry R.
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2007-09
Subjects:ACCESS TO THE INTERNET, AID, ASSETS, AUTONOMY, BANKS, BARRIER, BASIC SERVICES, BRIBES, BUSINESS CORPORATIONS, CELL PHONES, CELL-PHONE, CENTRAL BANKS, CIVIL SOCIETY, COLLAPSE, COLLAPSES, COLLECTIVE, COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY, COMPANY, COMPETITIVE MARKET, CONSOLIDATION, CORPORATE INSTITUTIONS, CORPORATE ORGANIZATION, CORPORATIONS, CORRUPT, CRIPPLE, CRISES, CUSTOM, DEMOCRACIES, DEMOCRACY, DEMOCRATIC PROCESSES, DIRECT CLAIM, DISPUTE RESOLUTION, DIVISION OF LABOR, DRIVERS, ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC COMPETITION, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC THEORY, ECONOMICS, ELECTRICITY, EX ANTE, EXPORT EARNINGS, EXTERNALITIES, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, FREEDOM OF SPEECH, FULL POTENTIAL, GLOBAL ECONOMY, GLOBALIZATION, GOVERNMENT REVENUE, GOVERNMENT SERVICES, GOVERNMENT TRANSPARENCY, HARDWARE, INCOME, INCORPORATION, INCORPORATION LAWS, INDIVIDUALS, INNOVATION, INSTITUTION, INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE, INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURES, INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, INVESTIGATION, JOINT STOCK COMPANIES, JOINT VENTURE, JUDICIAL SYSTEMS, JUDICIARIES, JUDICIARY, JUSTICE, JUSTICES, LABOR MARKETS, LEADERSHIP, LEGAL FRAMEWORK, LEGAL PROTECTION, LEGAL PROTECTIONS, LEGAL SYSTEMS, LICENSES, LIMITED, LIMITED ACCESS, LIMITED LIABILITY, LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANIES, LIMITED LIABILITY CORPORATIONS, MARKET ECONOMIES, MARKET ECONOMY, MATERIAL, MEDIA, MENU, MENUS, MONEY LAUNDERING, MONOPOLY, MONOPOLY PROFITS, MOTIVATION, MOVEMENT, MULTINATIONAL, NATURAL RESOURCES, NETWORKS, NEW TECHNOLOGIES, NEW TECHNOLOGY, OPEN ACCESS, OPEN MARKET, ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE, PETTY CORRUPTION, POLICE, POLITICAL CONTROL, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS, POLITICAL INTERESTS, POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS, POLITICAL PARTIES, POLITICAL PROCESS, POLITICAL SCIENTISTS, POLITICIANS, PRIVATE CORPORATIONS, PRIVATE NETWORKS, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT, PRIVATIZATION, PRODUCTIVITY, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PUBLIC FUNDS, RADIO, REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT, RENTS, RESULT, RESULTS, RULE OF LAW, RULING PARTY, SANCTIONS, SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS, SOCIAL STRUCTURES, SOCIETIES, SOCIETY, STOCK CORPORATIONS, STOCKHOLDERS, TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT, TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER, TELEPHONE, TELEPHONES, TELEVISION, TORTS, TRIAL, TYPES OF ORGANIZATIONS, UNION, UNIVERSITIES, USER, VIOLENCE, WEB, WESTERN EUROPE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/09/8332470/limited-access-orders-developing-world-new-approach-problems-development
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/7341
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!