Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 07/2008

Economic Integration and Incipient Democracy

Philip I. Levy

March 2008

American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research

Abstract

Contrary to the common approach in the literature, the economic and other forces that push countries toward democratization are continuous rather than discrete. This paper argues that failure to account for the latent variable of "incipient democracy" can bias estimates of democracy's determinants. The paper presents a new avenue by which economic integration can foster democracy, one that focuses on the means for democratization rather than the motive. This strengthening of civil society is identified as a necessary component of economic integration with modern distributed production, though we would not expect to see it in autocracies dependent on natural resource trade. The arguments are applied to the case of China.