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Property rights revisited
Affiliation:1. University of Manchester, UK;2. United Nations University - Comparative Regional Integration Studies, Belgium;3. Ghent University, Belgium;1. Department of Economics, Florida International University, FL, 33199, USA;2. Department of Economics, Deakin University, Victoria, 3125, Australia
Abstract:Over the last 20 years, a large number of papers have tried to quantify the effect of property rights on a wide range of variables like growth, trade and to a lesser extent, inequality. However, these studies have been inherently limited by measures of the security of property rights that are currently available. These suffer from any of a number of shortcomings, ranging from a lack of availability, objectivity, or the fact that they measure a broader concept like the rule of law. This paper tries to address this gap by proposing a new index of property rights. Specifically, we use a state-space model to combine all available indicators tracking the security of property rights into an index that covers 191 countries over the period 1994–2014. We compare it to the existing indicators by revisiting the link between inequality, democracy and property rights, using a panel threshold regression model with fixed-effects. Depending on the measure of property rights that is used, there can be considerable differences in the size, significance and even the sign of the estimated parameters. Specifically, in contrast with existing measures, we find that a strengthening of the security of property rights reduces inequality in highly democratic countries only via the government's redistribution channel.
Keywords:Property rights  Institutions  Inequality  State-space model  Government redistribution  Panel threshold regression  O38  O34  O17  H24  C32  O15
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