Artificial States
DRI Working Paper No. 24
By Alberto Alesina, Harvard University; William Easterly, New York University; Janina Matuszeski, Harvard University
Artificial States
Artificial states are those in which political borders do not coincide with a division of nationalities desired by the people on the ground. We propose and compute for all countries in the world two new measures of the degree to which states are artificial. One is based on measuring how borders split ethnic groups into two separate adjacent countries. The other measures how straight land borders are, under the assumption the straight land borders are more likely to be artificial. We then show that these two measures seem to be highly correlated with several measures of political and economic success.