Published Online: Oct 14, 2015
Page range: 480 - 497
Received: Aug 07, 2014
Accepted: Dec 29, 2014
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/ethemes-2014-0029
Keywords
© 2014 Zoran Stefanović, published by De Gruyter Open
This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Public License.
The impact of institutional arrangements, the “rules of the game”, in terms of Douglass North’s definition, on macroeconomic dynamics has been largely detected in the economic-historical records. However, clarification of the nature of institutional currents and their relationship with the paths of economic growth is a challenge for contemporary economic theory. The paper will present a retrospective of the conceptualization of institutional change as a process that mimics the evolutionary systems, relying on relevant theoretical concepts and selective empirical material that is contained herein. In this sense, the paper gives insight into the important contributions reflecting on the relationship between instiutions and economic growth, the evolutionary theory of socio-economic changes and their possible implications for the current reform process. Total of argumentation offered in the paper indicates stability and inertia of institutional structures, whose dynamics is prone to path dependency. Insisting on universal reform solutions, neutral with respect to local circumstances in the process of stimulating economic growth, turns out to be ineffective.