Quantifying the ‘end of history’ through a Bayesian Markov-chain approach

Political regimes have been changing throughout human history. After the apparent triumph of liberal democracies at the end of the twentieth century, Francis Fukuyama and others have been arguing that humankind is approaching an ‘end of history’ (EoH) in the form of a universality of liberal democra...

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Main Author: Florian Klimm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2022-11-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.221131
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author Florian Klimm
author_facet Florian Klimm
author_sort Florian Klimm
collection DOAJ
description Political regimes have been changing throughout human history. After the apparent triumph of liberal democracies at the end of the twentieth century, Francis Fukuyama and others have been arguing that humankind is approaching an ‘end of history’ (EoH) in the form of a universality of liberal democracies. This view has been challenged by recent developments that seem to indicate the rise of defective democracies across the globe. There has been no attempt to quantify the expected EoH with a statistical approach. In this study, we model the transition between political regimes as a Markov process and—using a Bayesian inference approach—we estimate the transition probabilities between political regimes from time-series data describing the evolution of political regimes from 1800 to 2018. We then compute the steady state for this Markov process which represents a mathematical abstraction of the EoH and predicts that approximately 46% of countries will be full democracies. Furthermore, we find that, under our model, the fraction of autocracies in the world is expected to increase for the next half-century before it declines. Using random-walk theory, we then estimate survival curves of different types of regimes and estimate characteristic lifetimes of democracies and autocracies of 244 years and 69 years, respectively. Quantifying the expected EoH allows us to challenge common beliefs about the nature of political equilibria. Specifically, we find no statistical evidence that the EoH constitutes a fixed, complete omnipresence of democratic regimes.
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spelling doaj.art-69c096a116ef48e0b2011e5ba27139ad2023-11-24T17:25:26ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032022-11-0191110.1098/rsos.221131Quantifying the ‘end of history’ through a Bayesian Markov-chain approachFlorian Klimm0Department of Computational Molecular Biology, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Ihnestraße 63-73, 14195 Berlin, GermanyPolitical regimes have been changing throughout human history. After the apparent triumph of liberal democracies at the end of the twentieth century, Francis Fukuyama and others have been arguing that humankind is approaching an ‘end of history’ (EoH) in the form of a universality of liberal democracies. This view has been challenged by recent developments that seem to indicate the rise of defective democracies across the globe. There has been no attempt to quantify the expected EoH with a statistical approach. In this study, we model the transition between political regimes as a Markov process and—using a Bayesian inference approach—we estimate the transition probabilities between political regimes from time-series data describing the evolution of political regimes from 1800 to 2018. We then compute the steady state for this Markov process which represents a mathematical abstraction of the EoH and predicts that approximately 46% of countries will be full democracies. Furthermore, we find that, under our model, the fraction of autocracies in the world is expected to increase for the next half-century before it declines. Using random-walk theory, we then estimate survival curves of different types of regimes and estimate characteristic lifetimes of democracies and autocracies of 244 years and 69 years, respectively. Quantifying the expected EoH allows us to challenge common beliefs about the nature of political equilibria. Specifically, we find no statistical evidence that the EoH constitutes a fixed, complete omnipresence of democratic regimes.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.221131democracyMarkov chaincultural evolutionnetwork inference
spellingShingle Florian Klimm
Quantifying the ‘end of history’ through a Bayesian Markov-chain approach
Royal Society Open Science
democracy
Markov chain
cultural evolution
network inference
title Quantifying the ‘end of history’ through a Bayesian Markov-chain approach
title_full Quantifying the ‘end of history’ through a Bayesian Markov-chain approach
title_fullStr Quantifying the ‘end of history’ through a Bayesian Markov-chain approach
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying the ‘end of history’ through a Bayesian Markov-chain approach
title_short Quantifying the ‘end of history’ through a Bayesian Markov-chain approach
title_sort quantifying the end of history through a bayesian markov chain approach
topic democracy
Markov chain
cultural evolution
network inference
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.221131
work_keys_str_mv AT florianklimm quantifyingtheendofhistorythroughabayesianmarkovchainapproach