Social Mobility and Stability of Democracy: Reevaluating De Tocqueville*
Author(s)
Acemoglu, K. Daron; Egorov, Georgy; Sonin, Konstantin
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Social Mobility and Stability of Democracy: Reevaluating De Tocqueville
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An influential thesis often associated with De Tocqueville views social mobility as a bulwark of democracy:when members of a social group expect to join the ranks of other social groups in the near future, they should have less reason to exclude these other groups from the political process. In this paper, we investigate this hypothesis using a dynamic model of political economy. As well as formalizing this argument,our model demonstrates its limits, elucidating a robust theoretical force making democracy less stable in societies with high social mobility: when the median voter expects to move up (respectively down),she would prefer to give less voice to poorer (respectively richer) social groups. Our theoretical analysis shows that in the presence of social mobility, the political preferences of an individual depend on the potentially conflicting preferences of her “future selves,” and that the evolution of institutions is determined through the implicit interaction between occupants of the same social niche at different points in time.When social mobility is endogenized, our model identifies new political economic forces limiting the amount of mobility in society – because the middle class will lose out from mobility at the bottom and because a peripheral coalition between the rich and the poor may oppose mobility at the top.
Date issued
2017-11-06Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of EconomicsJournal
The Quarterly Journal of Economics
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Citation
Daron Acemoglu et al. "Social Mobility and Stability of Democracy: Reevaluating De Tocqueville." The Quarterly Journal of Economics 133, 2 (May 2018): 1041–1105
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0033-5533
1531-4650