Institutions and Geography: Comment on Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson (2000)
    Working Paper 8114
  
        
    DOI 10.3386/w8114
  
        
    Issue Date 
  
          This paper responds to findings by Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson (2000) that suggest weak institutions, but not physical geography and correlates like disease burden, explain current variation in levels of economic development across former colonies. Using similar data and expanding the sample of countries analyzed, our regression analysis shows that both institutions and geographically-related variables such as malaria incidence or life expectancy at birth are strongly linked to gross national product per capita. We argue that the evidence presented in Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson is likely limited by the inherently small sample of ex-colonies and the limited geographic dispersion of those countries.
- 
        
- 
      Copy CitationJohn W. McArthur and Jeffrey D. Sachs, "Institutions and Geography: Comment on Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson (2000)," NBER Working Paper 8114 (2001), https://doi.org/10.3386/w8114.
 
     
    