Institutions are a key explanation for long-run development, but we still do not know why institutions persist even after drastic political changes. This article explains how and why institutions persisted after the breakdown of colonial rule and the establishment of new republics. The paper analyses a society composed by two elites (economic and political) and a nonelite. This article charac- terizes the conditions for accommodation between elites, conflict (i.e., independence) and the emergence of a nondemocracy. Two elements prevented accommodation between elites and ultimately led to independence: their similar strength and the political elite’s inability to attract the nonelite. The ability of the economic elite to attract the nonelite to the independence army provided a credi- ble mechanism to redistribute wealth and political power. With this mechanism, institutional changes, like the extension of the franchise (i.e., democracy), was not needed. This framework can help understand institutional persistence after the breakdown of colonial rule.
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1 December 2021
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Research Article|
December 01 2021
No Need for Democracy: Interelite Conflict and Independence in the Andes Available to Purchase
Raúl Aldaz Peña
Raúl Aldaz Peña
San Francisco School of Economics, Universidad San Francisco de Quito
, Quito 170901, Ecuador
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I want to thank the reviewers, editor, Amrita Dhillon, and participants at EPSA, ECPR, Universidad San Francisco, Flacso-Ecuador and Queen Mary University of London for their comments and suggestions. All remaining mistakes are mine.
Online ISSN: 2693-9304
Print ISSN: 2693-9290
© 2021 R. Aldaz Peña
2021
R. Aldaz Peña
Licensed re-use rights only
Journal of Historical Political Economy (2021) 1 (4): 561–590.
Citation
Aldaz Peña R (2021), "No Need for Democracy: Interelite Conflict and Independence in the Andes". Journal of Historical Political Economy, Vol. 1 No. 4 pp. 561–590, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/115.00000020
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