Daron Acemoglu,James A.Robinson

Why Nations Fail

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  • Maxym Sergiyovychhas quoted10 years ago
    They get it wrong not by mistake or ignorance but on purpose. To understand this, you have to go beyond economics and expert advice on the best thing to do and, instead, study how decisions actually get made, who gets to make them, and why those people decide to do what they do. This is the study of politics and political processes.
  • Maxym Sergiyovychhas quoted10 years ago
    Keep those people in check with effective democracy or watch your nation fail.
  • Veronika Zagievahas quoted9 years ago
    In 1800 probably only 2 to 3 percent of the citizens of the Ottoman Empire were literate, compared with 60 percent of adult males and 40 percent of adult females in England. In the Netherlands and Germany, literacy rates were even higher.
  • Ira Yashinahas quoted9 years ago
    The most famous was the commenda, a rudimentary type of joint stock company, which formed only for the duration of a single trading mission. A commenda involved two partners, a “sedentary” one who stayed in Venice and one who traveled. The sedentary partner put capital into the venture, while the traveling partner accompanied the cargo. Typically, the sedentary partner put in the lion’s share of the capital.
  • Ira Yashinahas quoted9 years ago
    Extractive institutions are so common in history because they have a powerful logic: they can generate some limited prosperity while at the same time distributing it into the hands of a small elite.
  • Ira Yashinahas quoted9 years ago
    Farther east, the Russian emperor Peter the Great was also consolidating an absolutism far more intense and extractive than even Louis XIV could manage.
  • Данилhas quoted9 years ago
    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.
  • Zain Rasoolhas quoted2 months ago
    Wael Khalil, the software engineer and blogger who emerged as one of the leaders of the Egyptian protest movement,
  • Zain Rasoolhas quoted2 months ago
    Not only do you risk robbery, but getting all the permissions and greasing all the palms just to open is no easy endeavor
  • Антон Приймаhas quoted10 months ago
    The people who suffer from the extractive economic institutions cannot hope for absolutist rulers to voluntarily change political institutions and redistribute power in society. The only way to change these political institutions is to force the elite to create more pluralistic institutions.
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