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ID162222
Title ProperOffice-Selling, Corruption, and Long-Term Development in Peru
LanguageENG
AuthorGuardado, Jenny
Summary / Abstract (Note)The paper uses a unique hand-collected dataset of the prices at which the Spanish Crown sold colonial provincial governorships in seventeenth and eighteenth century Peru to examine the impact of colonial officials on long-run development. Combining provincial characteristics with exogenous variation in appointment criteria due to the timing of European wars, I first show that provinces with greater extraction potential tended to fetch higher prices and attract worse buyers. In the long run, these high-priced provinces have lower household consumption, schooling, and public good provision. The type of governors ruling these provinces likely exacerbated political conflict, ethnic segregation, and undermined institutional trust among the population.
`In' analytical NoteAmerican Political Science Review Vol. 112, No.4; Nov 2018: p.971-995
Journal SourceAmerican Political Science Review 2018-10 112, 4
Key WordsPeru ;  Corruption ;  Long-Term Development ;  Office-Selling