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Justice and Effectiveness

Justice and Effectiveness. For Consideration…. What things must the leaders and their people think about in considering what the state should do?. Justice. What is justice? Do we base it on weight of contributions? Contributions can be based on luck as much as virtue…

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Justice and Effectiveness

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  1. Justice and Effectiveness

  2. For Consideration… • What things must the leaders and their people think about in considering what the state should do?

  3. Justice • What is justice? • Do we base it on weight of contributions? • Contributions can be based on luck as much as virtue… • Doesn’t account for need… • Do we base it on need? • Very tricky… • It is all very difficult to assess • Substantive justice • Looks at the idea that people should receive what they need and deserve

  4. Procedural Justice • Worries less about fairness or distribution and more about procedures by which decisions are reached • Whether government action is arbitrary • Capricious • Due process • Could have learned of existence and meaning of law before committing act • Entitle to know with why they are charged and the evidence against them • Judges must be disinterested, unbiased, and attentive • Some means of later reconsideration • Trial is invalid if rules violated

  5. Procedural Justice • Whether special basic rights are violated • Right to survive • Right of free speech • Right to privacy • Not necessarily absolute • Whether special overriding social needs are present • To be just to most of the people, may mean being less just to others • Times of war • Ends justify the means • Is this right normally?

  6. Effectiveness • An effective policy is one that gives the state and the people of the state the greatest benefits at the least cost • Tough to measure and compare • Unanticipated consequences • Any judgment must take into account all the costs and benefits…not just those intended

  7. Effectiveness • Do we want to rely more on governmental authority or market mechanisms to carry out policies? • Under government authority, people get less say • Under market mechanisms, government leaves choice up to people to choose for themselves through exchange of goods and services • Can be an interplay of both… • Examples? When? Why?

  8. Problems • Problems with Authority • Not good at getting things to people who need them most or will value them most (does not allocate optimally) • Lack of incentives to encourage authority-based policy to use resources as efficiently as they might need to be • Problems with Market • Unequal distribution • Not good with public goods • Do not take into account externalities • Social cost does not enter market calculations • Positive and negatives

  9. Democracy and Autocracy

  10. Regimes • General form of government of a state—includes constitution and rules of government • Typically continues beyond the term of officeholders • Democracy and autocracy

  11. Democracy • Regime in which all fully qualified citizens vote at regular intervals to choose, from among alternative candidates, the people who will be in charge of setting the state’s policies • There is no pure democracy • On the other end, we have authoritarian democracy…thus, we have a range • Democratic bargain • Implicit agreement by conflicting groups to accept possibility that they will lose out in the making of policy • Of the 104 states that were independent as of 1960, only 29 have an uninterrupted record of electoral democratic government

  12. The Waves of Democracy • Wave I • Wake of WWI • Germany and others in E. Europe…along with Latin America • Ultimately tended to fail…why? • Wave II • Wake of WWII • Reestablished in Germany and Italy…and other former European colonies in Third World • Wave III • Late 1970s thru mid-1990s • Southern Europe, Latin America, E. Europe, around the world

  13. So Why Democracy During the Third Wave? • Fatigue of authoritarian regimes • International pressure • Citizen desire for security against arbitrary abuse • Citizen desire for economic development • Potential downfall: democracy opens up potential for regional nationalist pressures

  14. What We Learn from the Third Wave • The importance of pacts • Try to assure smooth transition • Amnesty? Symbolic affirmation? Fund army? • Didn’t work in Eastern Europe as much…why? • Sudden changes • Figure 7.1 • Net rewards of coming out may tip suddenly • The danger of favoring democracy can decrease quickly • Economic crisis or not • Transition occurs differently depending on state of economy • Impacts the importance of pacts

  15. Link Between Prosperity and Democracy • Average per capita income of $9,053 for democracies, $1,653 for non-democracies • Are democracies better at fostering economic growth? Or is it too tough to say? • Figure 7.2…once a state is a democracy, prosperity makes it more likely that it will remain a democracy • Link between democracy and freedom…what makes it tough? • Link between democracy and capitalism…what makes it tough?

  16. Autocracy • Of the 104 states that were independent as of 1960, only 13 have an uninterrupted record of autocratic regimes • Examples • USSR • Pakistan • Saudi Arabia • Congo/Zaire

  17. Military Government • Group of officers use troops to take over the government apparatus and run it themselves • Coup d’etat • Cluster around certain times • Institutionalized in some areas • Military controls more armed power than anyone else • Vary with political direction • No relationship with economic performance

  18. Why Not More? • Legitimacy • How they take power • They have not been trained to be political leaders • Problem of succession • Shaky alliances

  19. One-Party States • Government is based on and supports a political party…the only one allowed to exist • More stable and responsive than military • Embrace a reasonable range of social groups • Varied positions can develop into factions • Transition of leadership can occur • Most frequent form of autocratic government

  20. Other Flavors • Monarchy • Power passes through descent in family • Relatively underdeveloped • Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait • Different than constitutional monarchies • Theocracy • Religious leaders derive power from positions in religion • Iran and Vatican City

  21. Democracy v. Autocracy • Economic development • Average performance grew at about 4% • Range of possible outcomes was wildly greater than for democracies • More likely to have miracles or disasters with autocracy • Life expectancy • At each level of per capita income , those living in democracies can expect to live significantly longer than those in autocracies (as much as 5.6 years in most prosperous states)

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