Socio-political instability and growth dynamics

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Authors

Bittencourt, Manoel
Gupta, Rangan
Makena, Philton
Stander, Lardo

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

We develop an overlapping generations (OLG) monetary endogenous growth model characterized by socio-political instability, with the latter being specified as a fraction of output lost due to strikes, riots and protests. We show that growth dynamics arise in this model when socio-political instability is a function of inflation. In particular, two distinct growth dynamics emerge, one convergent and the other divergent contingent on the strength of the response of socio-political instability to inflation. Since our theoretical results hinge on socio-political instability being a function of inflation, we test the prediction that inflation affects socio-political instability positively by using a panel of 156 countries for the 1980–2012 period, and allowing for country and time fixed effects. The results indicate that inflation relates positively with socio-political instability. Policy makers should be cognisant that it is crucial to maintain long-run price stability, as failure to do so may result in high inflation emanating from excessive money supply growth, leading to high (er) socio-political instability, and ultimately, the economy being on a divergent balanced growth path.

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Keywords

Overlapping generations (OLG), Dynamics, Endogenous growth, Inflation, Socio-political instability, SDG-08: Decent work and economic growth

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Citation

Bittencourt, M., Gupta, R., Makena, P. & Stander, L. 2022, 'Socio-political instability and growth dynamics', Economic Systems, vol. 46, no. 4, art. 101005, pp. 1-11, doi : 10.1016/j.ecosys.2022.101005.