Goldilocks Nationalism; The size and homogeneity of a country’s population has a big bearing on its economic policies. Economist, Sep 27, 2014.
www.economist.com/news/finance-a ... earing-its-economic
Quote:
"The steady shrinking of the world’s political units raises the question of what the ideal size would be from an economic perspective. * * * a country’s population, economists believe, has a big impact on all sorts of policies, from the level of government spending to its openness to trade.
"Borders, no matter how porous, also choke off trade.
Note:
(a) "A 19th-century British prime minister [Robert Gascoyne-Cecil] is reported to have complained to a French ambassador [to Britain in 1897], 'If you were not such persistent protectionists, you would not find us so keen to annex territories!'”
(b) "More recently Mr [Roman] Wacziarg [of the University of California, Los Angeles], Klaus Desmet of Southern Methodist University and Ignacio Ortuño-Ortín of University Carlos III in Spain studied the relationship between ethno-linguistic diversity and several economic variables. In general, they reckon, less diverse economies engage in more redistribution and greater provision of public goods such as education and infrastructure. In highly homogenous Denmark, government spending runs to nearly 60% of GDP. More diverse America allocates just 39% of GDP to government; in polyglot Singapore the figure is just 14% (see chart)."
(i) For University Carlos III, see Charles III University of Madrid
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_III_University_of_Madrid
(Spanish: Universidad Carlos III de Madrid; Its name refers to Charles III of Spain [1716 – 1788; King of Spain 1759-1788]; Established 1989; public)
(ii) The first sentence of THIS quotation, together with the bibliography (labeled as “Sources“ in the online version, that does not show up in print version), coincides with the “Source” within the chart. That is,
Klaus Desmet, Ignacio Ortuño-Ortín, and Romain Wacziarg, The Political Economy of Linguistic Cleavages. Journal of Development Economics, 2012.
www.eco.uc3m.es/~desmet/papers/cleavages.pdf
(A) Having read the paper, I conclude that the paper contributes to the x-axis ONLY ("Ethnolinguistic diversity index") but NOT the y-axis ("Government spending, % of GDP 2012"). Perhaps because the latter is readily available.
(B) In (A), I say “contributes to,” because the paper deals with the effects (including section “3.2 Redistribution”) of linguistic diversity (alone; without consideration of “ethnic diversity” not to mention both). Particularly revealing is footnote 13 of that section:
“13 Our paper uses linguistic heterogeneity rather than ethnic differences, so by our
measures the US would look quite more homogeneous than if we focused on ethnicity.
This would affect our results in the direction of making it less likely to find any effect of
diversity on redistribution.
(iii) What surprises me is Taiwan, whose government traced its root to China (and its alliance with Soviet Union) is considered (by me at least) to harbor/retain plenty of socialism (in government administration and people's thinking). According to the chart, however, Taiwan's "government spending [as a percentage] of GDP, 2012" was merely ~21%, which is small. No wonder Taiwan does not cut personal income tax--Taiwan did reduce rate of inheritance tax (in 2009) and corporate tax (in 2010), That is because both personal tax and government spending are quite low already (caution: the tax rate for top income bracket in Taiwan is 40%, about the same as that of federal income tax (39.6%) in US).
|