I’m not sure why you think we disagree, my “(by who?)” parenthetical was precisely pointing out that if poor countries aren’t better-run it’s not because it’s not known what works for developing poor countries (state capacity, land reform, industrial policy), it’s that the elites of those countries (dictators, generals, warlords, semi-feudal landlords and tribal chiefs; what Acemoglu and Robinson call “extractive institutions”) are generally not incentive-aligned with the general well-being of the population and indeed are the ones who actively benefit from state capacity failures and rent-seeking in the first place.
I however don’t see much reason to think that bringing back robust social democracy in developed countries is going to conclusively solve that (the golden age of social democracy certainly seemed to be compatible with desperately holding ontoold colonial empires and then first propping upthose very extractive institutions after formal decolonization under the guise of the Cold War), nor that the progress studies/abundance agenda people (mostly from bipartisan or conservative-leaning think tanks with ties to tech corporations and Peter Thiel in particular) seem to be particularly interested in bringing back robust social democracy in the first place.
I’m not sure why you think we disagree, my “(by who?)” parenthetical was precisely pointing out that if poor countries aren’t better-run it’s not because it’s not known what works for developing poor countries (state capacity, land reform, industrial policy), it’s that the elites of those countries (dictators, generals, warlords, semi-feudal landlords and tribal chiefs; what Acemoglu and Robinson call “extractive institutions”) are generally not incentive-aligned with the general well-being of the population and indeed are the ones who actively benefit from state capacity failures and rent-seeking in the first place.
I however don’t see much reason to think that bringing back robust social democracy in developed countries is going to conclusively solve that (the golden age of social democracy certainly seemed to be compatible with desperately holding onto old colonial empires and then first propping up those very extractive institutions after formal decolonization under the guise of the Cold War), nor that the progress studies/abundance agenda people (mostly from bipartisan or conservative-leaning think tanks with ties to tech corporations and Peter Thiel in particular) seem to be particularly interested in bringing back robust social democracy in the first place.