Social Science Methods
Redistribution and Welfare States
Globalization
Development + Underdevelopment
Acemoglu and Robinson
100

What is a variable?

A measurable entity that can vary or change

100

What is an example of a universal welfare state benefit in the US?

K-12 Education

100

What is an example of pushback against globalization from current events?

Brexit, MAGA

100

What is a command economy and what is a country example of it?

A command economy is an economy that is controlled and coordinated by the central government. Examples are North Korea and China.

100

What is an extractive institution and who prospers as a result of them?

This is an institution set up simply to extract resources, and does not provide any benefits to the general population. The elites prosper as a result of extractive institutions.

200

Why is it important to have control variables when conducting social science research?

Control variables help you to be increasingly more certain that the effect that is demonstrated by the IVs on the DV are actually a result of the IV, and not being caused by another variable

200

Present one argument for and one argument against a large welfare state

FOR: Provides public goods that would not otherwise exist due to various market failures (collective action problems, etc)


AGAINST: The government should not intervene in the economy, prioritization of the free market, higher taxes

200

What is a cultural effect of globalization?

Countries around the world are becoming more homogeneous in terms of their cultures, since culture (especially those cultures from more prosperous states) can be exported to countries world wide. Example: Popularity of McDonalds, Hollywood films, US singers, etc in many countries around the world

200

What is a market failure? What are 3 types of market failures?

A market failure is the inability of the market to produce or distribute wanted goods or services

Increasing returns to scale: it costs increasingly less to produce units of a product the more of it you produce. This can create monopolies.

Public goods: Public goods such as highways create a collective action problem

Externalities: Externalities, such as pollution, are unable to be fixed through the market

200

What is an inclusive institution? Who prospers as a result of it?

Inclusive institutions are created to give large amounts of people access to benefits of government. Non-elites benefit because of these, and nations are more stable.

300

What is a probabilistic relationship? Is it the same as a correlation? A causal mechanism?

Probabilistic relationships display tendencies, but are not hard and fast laws. You can infer a probabilistic relationship from a correlation, but this does not imply causation. (Nor does correlation!)

300

What are three hypotheses for differences in welfare state size and spending?

1. Left-Labor

2. Wagner's Law

3. State strength

4. Diversity

300

What is the race to the bottom?

Countries with lower amounts of capital will lower their taxes and human rights standards in order to compete for foreign investments with the countries around them

300

What is Jarod Diamond's thesis regarding development?

The different availabilities of animal and plant species created different farming outcomes, which led to different paths of technological change. The Spanish were able to dominate South America because of their longer history with farming, access to wheat and barley, use of horses

Guns, Germs and Steel

300

What is creative destruction and why do we care about it?

Creative destruction is when innovation is allowed to make non-innovative processes/institutions obsolete. It matters because all industries become obsolete in a global economy, so competition needs to be encouraged.

Ex: Dutch East India company has a monopoly on trade in the Indies, no one has any incentive to create more efficient cargo ships. 

400

Identify the IV in the following hypothesis:

An increase in the number of years of school attended by girls in a certain country leads to an increase in the percentage of people living in urban areas

IV: number of years of school attended by girls

400

What is a christian democratic welfare system and what is an example of a country that uses this type of welfare system?

Emphasizes employment based welfare benefits. This type of system protects against disruptions from income (provides unemployment insurance)

Examples: Germany, France, Italy

25% of GDP devoted to welfare programs

400

According to the Samuels, does globalization cause poverty?

No. According to the evidence presented in Samuels, the more globalized a country is, the more its economy grows and the more poverty is reduced.

400

What are the 4 ways in which social underdevelopment presents itself?

  1. Worse health outcomes
  2. Poorer educational outcomes
  3. Greater gender inequality
  4. Greater ethnic fragmentation
400

Why do nations fail?

Extractive institutions cause low levels of innovation, impotence for citizens to work, low levels of trust in the government, and lead to consolidation of power by elites/dictators

500

Construct a hypothesis from the following information:

IV: Per capita GDP

DV: Democracy

The effect of an increase in per capita GDP is an increase in democracy score

500

What is one hypothesized impact of globalization on welfare state spending?

"Race to the bottom": Investors favor lower amounts of government spending on welfare programs, and since government policies are a result of market forces, countries with less capital adopt less welfare policies 

Globalization has the largest effect in countries most exposed to the global market (i.e smaller countries like Sweden)

Globalization has no direct effect on welfare state size

500

What is one way that globalization weakens democracy? What is one way that it strengthens democracy?

WEAKENS: IGOs, which make most of the decisions on global economics, are comprised of unelected officials

STRENGTHENS: rise of human rights watch dog groups that ensure lower amounts of human rights abuses in various countries. Many IGOs work to defend democracy.

500

How does economic under development present itself?

  1. Poor infrastructure

  2. Large informal sector

  3. Informal housing

  4. Economy driven by intensive manufacturing

500

Compare and contrast North and South Korea in explaining why these similarly homogenous nations have reached such different fates using the ideas from Why Nations Fail

South Korea, despite not being a democracy in the 1950s, had an economy where private property was honored and the free market was able to prevail, with the state supporting economic ventures (inclusive). Education was highly valued, with incentives to excel in school.

North Korea had a command economy, where all benefits were given to the supreme leader (extractive institutions). Education in North Korea is almost exclusively propaganda.