Inclusive Institutions and Sustainable Development: Applying Acemoglu and Robinson’s Framework to the Global South

https://doi.org/10.35536/lje.2025.v30.i1.a4

Authors

  • Kainat Yaqoob BS Student, Department of Economics at Fatima Jinnah Women University, Rawalpindi, Pakistan.
  • Zainab Jehan Associate Professor, Department of Economics, Fatima Jinnah Women University, Rawalpindi, Pakistan. (Corresponding Author)
  • Sadia Sherbaz Lecturer Department of Economics at Fatima Jinnah Women University, Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

Keywords:

Economic and Political Institutions, Sustainable Development, Economic Freedom, Civil Liberties

Abstract

Sustainable development in the Global South faces a complex challenge, influenced by environmental, economic, and social factors, as well as issues like poor governance, political instability, and inequality. The literature emphasizes that institutions are crucial in shaping
incentives and behaviors that drive development. Inclusive institutions foster sustainability by providing equitable opportunities, safeguarding property rights, and encouraging innovation, whereas extractive institutions—marked by unequal systems and a lack of basic liberties— hinder progress. This research examines how economic and political institutions affect sustainable development in 94 developing countries from 1990 to 2019. Sustainable development, defined as the ecological efficiency of human development, is measured using the Sustainable Development Index (SDI) introduced by Hickel (2020). Economic institutions are measured using two indicators: economic freedom and de jure economic globalization, while political institutions are evaluated via de jure political globalization, judicial independence, democracy, and civil liberties. The empirical analysis shows that all indicators of inclusive institutions positively influence sustainable development in the Global South. Moreover, democracy proved to be the most effective in promoting sustainability, while the effect of de jure political globalization was the weakest in terms of magnitude (though still
statistically significant). These findings underscore the vital role of inclusive institutions in achieving sustainability, highlighting their capacity to balance development goals with environmental considerations. This study demonstrates that democracy enhances sustainable development more than economic liberalization in the Global South, challenging conventional policy priorities.

References

Abdullayevich, S. G. I., and Olimjono’g’li, B. Z. (2024). Achieving of sustainable

economic growth as a result of reducing inflation in the country. Web of

Discoveries: Journal of Analysis and Inventions, 2(4), 56-67.

Acemoglu, D., and Robinson, J.A. (2012). Why nations fail: The origins of power,

prosperity and poverty. Crown Publishing Group.

Acemoglu, D., Egorov, G., and Sonin, K. (2019). Political regimes and economic

growth. In B. A. Rockman (Ed.), Comparative Politics: Rationality, Culture, and

Structure, pp. 40-64. Cambridge University Press.

Acemoglu, D., Johnson, S., and Robinson, J.A. (2001). The colonial origins of

comparative development: An empirical investigation. American Economic

Review, 91(5), 1369–1401.

Acemoglu, D., Johnson, S., and Robinson, J.A. (2004). Institutions as the

fundamental cause of long-run growth. NBER Macroeconomics Annual, 19,

387–472.

Ahmad, W., Ullah, S., Ozturk, I., and Majeed, M.T. (2021). Does inflation instability

affect environmental pollution? Fresh evidence from Asian economies.

Energy & Environment, 32(7), 1275-1291.

Ahmed, Z., Ahmad, M., Rjoub, H., Kalugina, O. A., and Hussain, N. (2022).

Economic growth, renewable energy consumption, and ecological footprint:

Exploring the role of environmental regulations and democracy in

sustainable development. Sustainable Development, 30(4), 595-605.

Ahmed, F., Kousar, S., Pervaiz, A., and Shabbir, A. (2022). Do institutional quality

and financial development affect sustainable economic growth? Evidence

from South Asian countries. Borsa Istanbul Review, 22(1), 189-196.

Aidt, T.S. (2010). Corruption and sustainable development. International Handbook

on the Economics of Corruption, 2, 1-52.

Akalin, G., and Erdogan, S. (2021). Does democracy help reduce environmental

degradation?. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 28(6), 7226-7235.

Ali, S., Jehan, Z., and Sherbaz, S. (2022). Foreign capital flows and human

development in developing countries: Does institutional quality matter?

Zagreb International Review of Economics and Business, 25(1), 1-19.

Amegavi, G.B., Langnel, Z., Ahenkan, A., and Buabeng, T. (2022). The dynamic

relationship between economic globalisation, institutional quality, and ecological footprint: Evidence from Ghana. The Journal of International Trade and Economic Development, 31(6), 876-893

Apergis, N., and Payne, J.E. (2010). Renewable energy consumption and

economic growth: Evidence from a panel of OECD countries. Energy Policy,

38(1), 656-660.

Balcerzak, A.P., and Pietrzak, M.B. (2017). Human development and quality of

institutions in highly developed countries. In Financial Environment and

Business Development: Proceedings of the 16th Eurasia Business and Economics

Society Conference, pp. 231-241. Springer International Publishing.

Balsalobre-Lorente, D., Shahbaz, M., Murshed, M., and Nuta, F.M. (2023).

Environmental impact of globalization: The case of central and Eastern

European emerging economies. Journal of Environmental Management, 341,

118018.

Beck, T., Demirgüç-Kunt, A., and Levine, R. (2010). Financial institutions and

markets across countries and over time: The updated financial development

and structure database. The World Bank Economic Review, 24(1), 77-92.

Beck, T., Levine, R., and Loayza, N. (2000). Finance and the sources of growth.

Journal of Financial Economics, 58(1-2), 261-300.

Bellamy, R. (2012). The inevitability of a democratic deficit. Key Controversies in

European Integration, 64-71.

Bennett, D.L., Faria, H.J., Gwartney, J.D., and Morales, D.R. (2017). Economic

institutions and comparative economic development: A post-colonial

perspective. World Development, 96, 503–519.

BenYishay, A., and Betancourt, R. R. (2010). Civil liberties and economic

development. Journal of Institutional Economics, 6(3), 281–304.

Bilgili, F., and Bağlıtaş, H.H. (2022). The dynamic analysis of renewable energy’s

contribution to the dimensions of sustainable development and energy

security. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 29(50), 75730-75743.

Boettke, P.J., and Candela, R.A. (2017). The liberty of progress: Increasing returns,

institutions, and entrepreneurship. Social Philosophy and Policy, 34(1), 136–

163.

Dados, N., and Connell, R. (2012). The global south. Contexts, 11(1), 12-13.

Destek, M.A. (2020). Investigation on the role of economic, social, and political

globalization on environment: Evidence from CEECs. Environmental Science

and Pollution Research, 27(27), 33601-33614

Dong, K., et al. (2020). Renewable energy consumption and economic growth: A

review of the literature. Energy Economics, 86, 104689.

Dreher, A. (2006). Does globalization affect growth? Evidence from a new index of

globalization. Applied Economics, 38(10), 1091–1110.

Ebohon, O.J. (1996). The scope and limits of sustainable development in Africa's

built environment sector. International Journal of Sustainable Development and

World Ecology, 3(1), 1-12.

Elliott, J.R., and Clement, M.T. (2014). Urbanization and carbon emissions: A

nationwide study of local countervailing effects in the United States. Social

Science Quarterly, 95(1), 168–188.

Fadilah, S., Lestari, R., Sahdan, M.H., and Sahdan, A.Z.A. (2020). The impact of

renewable energy consumption on the economic growth of the ASEAN

countries. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy, 10(6), 602-608.

Feld, L.P., and Voigt, S. (2003). Economic growth and judicial independence:

Cross-country evidence using a new set of indicators. European Journal of

Political Economy, 19(3), 497-527.

Gani, A. (2021). Fossil fuel energy and environmental performance in an extended

STIRPAT model. Journal of Cleaner Production, 297, 126679.

Glaeser, E.L. (2020). Urbanization and its discontents. Eastern Economic

Journal, 46(2), 191-218.

Gwartney, J., Lawson, R., Hall, J., and Murphy, R. (2021). Economic Freedom of

the World-2021 Annual Report. Institute of Economic Affairs Monographs,

Forthcoming.

Hickel, J. (2020). The sustainable development index: Measuring the ecological

efficiency of human development in the Anthropocene. Ecological Economics,

167, 106331.

Hrysenko, M., Pryiatelchuk, O., and Shvorak, L. (2022). Correlation and

interaction of economic creativity factors as a determinant of sustainable

development (on the example of the EU countries). Baltic Journal of Economic

Studies, 8(2), 59–67.

Jacobson, M.Z., von Krauland, A.K., Coughlin, S. J., Dukas, E., Nelson, A.J.,

Palmer, F.C., and Rasmussen, K.R. (2022). Low-cost solutions to global

warming, air pollution, and energy insecurity for 145 countries. Energy and

Environmental Science, 15(8), 3343-3359.

Jorda, O., and Taylor, A.M. (2016). The time for austerity: Estimating the

macroeconomic effects of fiscal policy. The Economic Journal, 126(590), 2251–

2293.

Kaimuri, B., and Kosimbei, G. (2017). Determinants of sustainable development in

Kenya. Journal of Economics and Sustainable Development, 8(24), 17–36.

Ke, H., Yang, W., Liu, X., and Fan, F. (2020). Does innovation efficiency suppress

the ecological footprint? Empirical evidence from 280 Chinese

cities. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(18),

6826.

Kılıçarslan, Z., and Dumrul, Y. (2018). The impact of globalization on economic

growth: empirical evidence from the Turkey. International Journal of

Economics and Financial Issues, 8(5), 115-123.

Koirala, B.S., and Pradhan, G. (2020). Determinants of sustainable development:

Evidence from 12 Asian countries. Sustainable Development, 28(1), 39–45.

Levine, R. (2020). Finance and Growth: Theory and Evidence. Handbook of

Economic Growth, 1A, 865-934.

Mol, A.P. (2010). Ecological modernization as a social theory of environmental

reform. In The International Handbook of Environmental Sociology, Second

Edition. Edward Elgar Publishing.

Mol, A.P.J., and Sonnenfeld, D.A. (2000). Ecological modernization around the

world: Perspectives and critical debates. Frank Cass Publishers.

Muhammad, A.A. (2023). Examining the Relationship among unemployment,

inflation, and economic growth. Journal of Business and Economic

Options, 6(2), 23-31.

Mukherjee, S., and Chakraborty, D. (2013). Is environmental sustainability

influenced by socioeconomic and sociopolitical factors? Cross‐country

empirical evidence. Sustainable Development, 21(6), 353-371.

Nikolaev, B. (2014). Economic freedom and quality of life: Evidence from the

OECD’s Your Better Life Index. Journal of Private Enterprise, 29(3), 61-96.

North, D. C. (1990). Institutions, institutional change, and economic performance.

Cambridge University Press.

Osuji, O.K., and Abba, P. (2020). Domestic adjudicative institutions, developing

countries and sustainable development: Linkages and limitations. Corporate

Social Responsibility in Developing and Emerging Markets: Institutions, Actors

and Sustainable Development, 49.

Panwar, N.L., Kaushik, S.C., and Kothari, S. (2011). Role of renewable energy

sources in environmental protection: A review. Renewable and sustainable

energy reviews, 15(3), 1513-1524.

Rostow, W.W. (1959). The stages of economic growth: A non-communist manifesto.

Cambridge University Press.

Roy, K. C., and Tisdell, C. A. (1998). Good governance in sustainable development:

the impact of institutions. International Journal of Social Economics, 25(6/7/8),

1310-1325.

Sachikonye, L.M. (2002). Whither Zimbabwe? Crisis and democratisation. Review

of African Political Economy, 29(91), 13-20.

Santiago, R., Fuinhas, J.A., and Marques, A.C. (2020). The impact of globalization

and economic freedom on economic growth: The case of the Latin America

and Caribbean countries. Economic Change and Restructuring, 53(1), 61-85.

Schularick, M., and Taylor, A.M. (2012). Credit booms gone bust: monetary policy,

leverage cycles, and financial crises, 1870–2008. American Economic

Review, 102(2), 1029-1061.

Veeman, T.S., and Politylo, J. (2003). The role of institutions and policy in

enhancing sustainable development and conserving natural

capital. Environment, Development and Sustainability, 5, 317-332.

Vollmer, S., and Ziegler, M. (2009). Political institutions and human

development. The World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, 4818.

Wang, Q.J., Feng, G.F., Wang, H.J., and Chang, C.P. (2021). The impacts of

democracy on innovation: Revisited evidence. Technovation, 108, 102333.

Weimin, Z., Chishti, M.Z., Rehman, A., and Ahmad, M. (2021). A pathway toward

future sustainability: assessing the influence of innovation shocks on CO2

emissions in developing economies. Environment, Development and

Sustainability, 1-24.

Xu, X., Abbas, H.S.M., Sun, C., Gillani, S., Ullah, A., and Raza, M.A.A. (2021).

Impact of globalization and governance determinants on economic growth:

An empirical analysis of Asian economies. Growth and Change, 52(2), 1137-

1154.

Yang, Q., Ming, S., Zhang, R., and Yan, H. (2024). Green finance and corporate

environmental investment: “Scale Up” or “Efficiency Up"?. Plos one, 19(2),

e0297456.

Yolanda, Y. (2017). Analysis of factors affecting inflation and its impact on human

development index and poverty in Indonesia. European Research Studies

Journal, 20(4B), 38-56.

Zafar, A., Majeed, M.T., Nosheen, M., and Iqbal, J. (2021). Globalization, financial

development, and environmental sustainability: Evidence from

heterogenous income groups of Asia. Environmental Science and Pollution

Research, 28, 50430 - 50446.

Zamani, Z., and Tayebi, S.K. (2020). FDI as a determinant of sustainable

development in developing and emerging countries. Economic Research,

20(4), 33–65.

Zhang, L., Khan, Z., Abbas, S., and Ahamed, H. (2023). The roles of renewable

energy, globalization, population expansion and deliberative democracy on

Sustainable Development in South Asia. Environmental Science and Pollution

Research, 30(38), 88775-88788.

Zheng, D., Addas, A., Waseem, L.A., Asad Naqvi, S.A., Ahmad, M., and Sharif, K.

(2024). The hidden costs of inflation: A critical analysis of industrial

development and environmental consequences. Plos one, 19(8), e0297413.

Downloads

Published

2025-10-24