PREFACE
“Why
nations fail” Daron Acemoglou and James Robinson
“...Egypt
is poor precisely because it has been ruled by a narrow elite that
have organized society for their own benefit at the expense of the
vast mass of people.
Political
power has been narrowly concentrated, and has been used to create
great wealth for those who possess it, such as the $70 billion
fortune apparently accumulated by ex-president Mubarak. The losers
have been the Egyptian
people,
as they only too well understand...
...poor
countries are poor for the same reason that Egypt is poor.
Countries such as Great Britain and the United States became rich
because their citizens overthrew the elites who controlled power and
created a society where political rights were much more broadly
distributed, where the government was accountable and responsive to
citizens, and where the great mass of people could take advantage of
economic opportunities.
...the
reason that Britain is richer than Egypt is because in 1688, Britain
(or England, to be exact) had a revolution that transformed the
politics and thus the economics of the nation. People fought for and
won more political rights, and they used them to expand their
economic opportunities. The result was a fundamentally different
political and economic trajectory, culminating in the Industrial
Revolution.
The
Industrial Revolution and the technologies it unleashed didn’t
spread to Egypt, as that country was under the control of the Ottoman
Empire, which treated Egypt
in rather the same way as the Mubarak family later did. Ottoman rule
in Egypt was overthrown by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1798, but the
country then fell under the control of British colonialism, which had
as little interest as the Ottomans in promoting Egypt’s prosperity.
Though the Egyptians shook off the Ottoman and British empires and,
in 1952, overthrew their monarchy, these were not revolutions like
that of 1688 in England, and rather than fundamentally transforming
politics in Egypt, they brought to power another elite as
disinterested in achieving prosperity
for
ordinary Egyptians as the Ottoman and British had been. In
consequence, the basic structure of society did not change, and Egypt
stayed poor.
In
this book we’ll study how these patterns reproduce themselves over
time and why sometimes they are altered, as they were in England in
1688 and in France with the revolution of 1789. This will help us to
understand if the situation in Egypt has changed today and whether
the revolution that overthrew Mubarak will lead to a new set of
institutions capable of bringing prosperity to ordinary Egyptians.
Egypt has had revolutions in the past that did not change things,
because those who mounted the revolutions simply took over the reins
from those they’d deposed and re-created a similar system. It
is indeed difficult for ordinary citizens to acquire real political
power and change the way their society works. But it is possible, and
we’ll see how this happened in England, France, and the United
States, and also in Japan, Botswana, and Brazil.
Fundamentally
it is a political transformation of this sort that is required for a
poor society to become rich.... ”
HAVING
AN IDEA, STARTING A FIRM, AND GETTING A LOAN
“Why
nations fail” Daron Acemoglou and James Robinson
(Mexico
1910) "...The reason that the United States had a banking industry
that was radically better for the economic prosperity of the country
had nothing to do with differences in the motivation of those who
owned the banks. Indeed, the profit motive, which underpinned the
monopolistic nature of the banking industry in Mexico, was present in
the United States, too.
But
this profit motive was channeled differently because of the radically
different U.S. institutions. The bankers faced different economic
institutions, institutions that subjected them to much greater
competition. And this was largely because the politicians who wrote
the rules for the bankers faced very different incentives themselves,
forged by different political institutions. Indeed, in the late
eighteenth century,
shortly after the Constitution of the United States came into
operation, a banking system looking similar to that which
subsequently dominated Mexico began to emerge. Politicians tried to
set up state banking monopolies, which they could give to their
friends and partners in exchange for part of the monopoly profits.
The
banks
also quickly got into the business of lending money to the
politicians who regulated them, just as in Mexico. But this situation
was not sustainable in the United States, because the politicians who
attempted to create these banking monopolies, unlike their Mexican
counterparts, were subject to election and reelection. Creating
banking monopolies and giving loans to politicians is good business
for politicians, if they can get away with it. It is not particularly
good for the citizens, however. Unlike in Mexico, in the United
States the citizens could keep politicians in check and get rid of
ones who would use their offices to enrich themselves or create
monopolies for their cronies. In consequence, the banking monopolies
crumbled. The broad distribution of political rights in the United
States, especially when compared to Mexico, guaranteed equal access
to finance and loans. This in turn ensured that those with
ideas and inventions could benefit from them..."
MAKING
A BILLION OR TWO
“Why
nations fail” Daron Acemoglou and James Robinson
"...The
enduring implications of the organization of colonial society and
those societies’ institutional legacies shape the modern
differences between the United States and Mexico, and thus the two
parts of Nogales. The contrast between how Bill Gates and Carlos Slim
became the two richest men in the world—Warren Buffett is also a
contender—illustrates the forces at work. The rise of Gates and
Microsoft is well known, but Gates’s status as the world’s
richest person and the founder of one of the most technologically
innovative companies did not stop the U.S. Department of Justice from
filing civil actions against the Microsoft Corporation on May 8,
1998, claiming that Microsoft had abused monopoly power...
In
Mexico, Carlos Slim did not make his money by innovation. Initially
he excelled in stock market deals, and in buying and revamping
unprofitable firms. His major coup was the acquisition of Telmex, the
Mexican telecommunications monopoly that was privatized by President
Carlos Salinas in 1990. The government announced its intention to
sell 51 percent of the voting stock (20.4 percent of total stock) in
the company in September 1989 and received bids in November 1990.
Even though Slim
did not put in the highest bid, a consortium led by his Grupo Corso
won the auction. Instead of paying for the shares right away, Slim
managed to delay payment, using the dividends of Telmex itself to pay
for the stock. What was once a public monopoly now became Slim’s
monopoly, and it was hugely profitable.
The
economic institutions that made Carlos Slim who he is are very
different from those in the United States. If you’re a Mexican
entrepreneur, entry barriers will play a crucial role at every stage
of your career. These barriers include expensive licenses you have to
obtain, red tape you have to cut through, politicians and incumbents
who will stand in your way, and the difficulty of getting funding
from a financial sector often in cahoots with the incumbents you’re
trying to compete against. These barriers can be either
insurmountable, keeping you out of lucrative areas, or your greatest
friend, keeping your competitors at bay. The difference between the
two scenarios is of course whom you know and whom you can
influence—and yes, whom you
can
bribe. Carlos Slim, a talented, ambitious man from a relatively
modest background of Lebanese immigrants, has been a master at
obtaining exclusive contracts; he managed to monopolize the lucrative
telecommunications
market
in Mexico, and then to extend his reach to the rest of Latin
America...
Slim
has made his money in the Mexican economy in large part thanks to his
political connections. When he has ventured into the United States,
he has not been
successful..."
TOWARD
A THEORY OF WORLD INEQUALITY
“Why
nations fail” Daron Acemoglou and James Robinson
"...Finally,
the political institutions (of United States) ensured stability and
continuity. For one thing, they made sure that there was no risk of a
dictator taking power and changing the rules of the game,
expropriating their wealth, imprisoning them, or threatening their
lives and livelihoods. They also made sure that no particular
interest in society could warp the government in an economically
disastrous direction, because political power was both limited and
distributed sufficiently broadly that a set of economic institutions
that created the incentives for prosperity could emerge.
Though
institutions are the key to the differences between the two Nogaleses
and between Mexico and the United States, that doesn’t mean there
will be a consensus in Mexico to change institutions. There is no
necessity for a society to develop or adopt the institutions that are
best for economic growth or the welfare of
its citizens, because other institutions may be even better for those
who control politics and political institutions.
The
powerful and the rest of society will often disagree about which set
of institutions should remain in place and which ones should be
changed. Carlos Slim would not have been happy to see his political
connections disappear and the entry barriers protecting his
businesses fizzle—no matter that the entry of new businesses would
enrich millions of Mexicans. Because there is no such consensus, what
rules society ends up with is determined by politics: who has power
and how this power can be exercised.
Carlos
Slim has the power to get what he wants. Bill Gates’s power is far
more limited. That’s why our theory is about not just economics but
also politics. It is about the effects of institutions on the success
and failure of nations —thus
the economics of poverty and prosperity; it is also about how
institutions are determined and change over time, and how they fail
to change even when they create poverty and misery for millions—thus
the politics of poverty and
prosperity..."
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