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Measuring Democracy

Democracy is difficult to quantitatively measure and compare across countries due to its diverse institutions not being easily quantified and limitations in acquiring reliable data. While academics have studied cross-country variations in democracy, comparisons are constrained by large variations in democratic institutions between countries. Measuring democracy aggregately as a single observation per country and year faces econometric constraints and is limited to basic correlations, so cross-country comparisons of the qualitative concept of democracy may not always be methodologically rigorous.

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Alizeh Shahzain
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
33 views1 page

Measuring Democracy

Democracy is difficult to quantitatively measure and compare across countries due to its diverse institutions not being easily quantified and limitations in acquiring reliable data. While academics have studied cross-country variations in democracy, comparisons are constrained by large variations in democratic institutions between countries. Measuring democracy aggregately as a single observation per country and year faces econometric constraints and is limited to basic correlations, so cross-country comparisons of the qualitative concept of democracy may not always be methodologically rigorous.

Uploaded by

Alizeh Shahzain
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Measuring of Democracy

Because democracy is an overarching concept that includes the functioning of diverse institutions
which are not easy to measure, strong limitations exist in quantifying and econometrically measuring
the potential effects of democracy or its relationship with other phenomena—whether inequality,
poverty, education etc.
 Given the constraints in acquiring reliable data with within-country variation on aspects of
democracy, academics have largely studied cross-country variations. Yet variations between
democratic institutions are very large across countries which constrains meaningful comparisons
using statistical approaches. Since democracy is typically measured aggregately as a macro
variable using a single observation for each country and each year, studying democracy faces a
range of econometric constraints and is limited to basic correlations. Cross-country comparison of a
composite, comprehensive and qualitative concept like democracy may thus not always be, for many
purposes, methodologically rigorous or useful. [

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