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New research shows constituencies ruled by dynasts in India lag in both economic and social development

A research paper co-authored by a Harvard economist shows that dynastic rule worsens public provisions on nearly every measure.

August 21, 2017 / 17:29 IST
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Political families in India have been generally bad for development, with constituencies of dynastic members of parliament (MPs) lagging in both economic activity and social indices such as health services, a new research paper by two economists from Harvard (USA) and Mannheim (Germany) universities have found.

According to the paper “Understanding the economic impacts of political dynasties: theory and evidence from India”, dynastic MPs not only perform worse on objective measures of economic development, “they are also assessed by voters to perform worse.” This result is mainly driven by negative assessments from voters who do not share the MP’s caste or religious background.

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The paper, jointly authored by Harvard University’s Siddharth Eapen George and University of Mannheim’s Dominic Ponattu, shows that between 1999 and 2014, constituencies where dynasts win, night-time electricity availability has grown, on an average, 6.5 percentage points slower compared to constituencies where dynasts lose.

The paper, published last Thursday, used night-time luminosity or electricity availability as a measure of local economic activity. “Our baseline result is that dynastic rule results in slower growth of night time luminousity.