Authors
George Avelino, David S Brown, Wendy Hunter
Publication date
2005/7
Journal
American Journal of Political Science
Volume
49
Issue
3
Pages
625-641
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
Description
Empirical studies measuring the impact of globalization on social spending have appeared recently in leading journals. This study seeks to improve upon previous work by (1) employing a more sophisticated and comprehensive measure of financial openness; (2) using a more accurate measure of trade openness based on purchasing power parities; and (3) relying on social spending data that are more complete than those used by previous studies on Latin America. Our estimates suggest that several empirical patterns reported in previous work deserve a second look. We find that trade openness has a positive association with education and social security expenditures, that financial openness does not constrain government outlays for social programs, and that democracy has a strong positive association with social spending, particularly on items that bolster human capital formation.
Total citations
2005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202439143027253035313654404322242837232610