Résumé
This paper elucidates the willingness of an autocrat to push through institutional reforms in a context where traditional authorities represented by religious clerics are averse to them and where the military control the means of repression and can potentially stage a coup. We show that although the autocrat always wants to co-opt the military, this is not necessarily true of the clerics. Exclusive co-option of the military obtains where the loyalty of the autocrat’s army is strong while the organizational strength of religious movements is rather low. Radical institutional reforms can then be implemented. Empirically, the dominant regime in contemporary Muslim countries is the regime of double co-option where the autocrat resorts to a double-edged tactic: pleasing the official clerics by slowing the pace of reforms and ensuring the loyalty of the military so as to put down clerics-led rebellions.
langue originale | Anglais |
---|---|
Pages (de - à) | 1772-1820 |
Nombre de pages | 49 |
journal | Journal of the European Economic Association |
Volume | 21 |
Numéro de publication | 5 |
Les DOIs | |
Etat de la publication | Publié - 1 oct. 2023 |
Financement
We thank participants at seminars or conferences in Venice, Paris School of Economics, Toulouse School of Economics, Namur, Boston, and Harvard universities for their valuable feedback. Special thanks are owed to Jean-Marie Baland, Robert Barro, Alberto Bisin, Maristella Botticini, Maxim Boycko, Jean Paul Carvalho, Nathan Nunn, Rachel Kranton, Patrick Fran\u00E7ois, and Debraj Ray, as well as to the participants of the 2020 ThRed Zoom conference. We thank Eva Penelope Valentine Davoine for her research assistance. Support is gratefully acknowledged for the DFID Grant received under the EDI (Economic Development and Institutions) program. Emmanuelle Auriol acknowledges TSE-IAST funding from the French National Research Agency (ANR) under the Investments for the Future (Investissements d\u2019Avenir) program, grant ANR-17-EURE-0010. Finally, we thank the editor and four anonymous referees for their suggestions and comments on early versions of the paper. They helped us greatly improve the paper\u2019s content and organization. All remaining errors are ours.
Bailleurs de fonds | Numéro du bailleur de fonds |
---|---|
Department for International Development, UK Government | |
Paris School of Economics, Toulouse School of Economics | |
Agence Nationale de la Recherche | ANR-17-EURE-0010 |
Agence Nationale de la Recherche |