The growth rate in a dictatorship is better than in democratic rule. Give reasons
Answers
Answer:
The economic growth rate in all dictatorial regimes was 4.42 per cent as compared to all democratic regimes’ 3.95 per cent during the period 1995-2000.
In dictatorial regimes, the rules and regulations are rigid and compulsory. The citizens who disobey are severely punished.
In democratic regimes, as the leaders and bureaucrats think about their profits only, the government is not much keen to remove poverty and develop the country economically.
Answer:
Economic expansion because dictators are highly skilled individuals and frequently have business-minded personalities, therefore they will take excellent care of the nation's economy.
Democracy is a form of government where representatives are chosen by the general populace or other eligible state citizens. Any dictatorship is a system of government in which one person or a small group of people exercise absolute control over all other citizens.
Explanation:
The findings indicate that if all dictators had depended just on force or tradition, their economy would have developed at an average rate of 3.64 percent.
The average growth rate for dictatorships would have been slightly higher, at 5.09 percent, had they all been tightly institutionalised.
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