Published January 1, 2026 | Version v1
Thesis Open

Dynamic Institutional Adaptation Theory: A Novel Framework for Understanding Global Development Disparities

  • 1. ROR icon Singapore University of Social Sciences

Description

This thesis introduces Dynamic Institutional Adaptation Theory (DIAT), a novel theoretical framework that addresses fundamental limitations in existing development economics theories. While traditional approaches focus on static institutional quality, geographic determinism, or cultural factors, DIAT emphasizes dynamic adaptive capacity as the primary determinant of national prosperity. Building on the 2024 Nobel Prize-winning work of Acemoglu, Johnson, and Robinson on institutional economics, this research demonstrates that countries' ability to adapt institutions to changing circumstances—rather than the quality of institutions at any given time—explains global wealth disparities.

The theory introduces the Adaptive Capacity Index (ACI), comprising four components: Information Processing Capacity, Coordination Mechanisms, Learning and Innovation, and Legitimacy and Social Cohesion. Through comprehensive empirical analysis of 70+ countries using advanced econometric techniques including Cross-sectional Augmented Autoregressive Distributed Lag (CS-ARDL) estimation, this research demonstrates that adaptive capacity explains approximately 45% of variation in development outcomes, significantly outperforming traditional institutional quality measures.

DIAT successfully resolves several puzzles that challenge existing theories, including the "China puzzle" of rapid growth despite weak formal institutions, the resource curse paradox explaining why some resource-rich countries prosper while others fail, and the diverse development experiences across countries with similar initial conditions. The framework provides actionable policy guidance for building institutional capabilities that enable countries to navigate complex development challenges successfully.

This work represents a paradigmatic advance in development economics, offering superior explanatory power compared to existing frameworks while providing more realistic and achievable guidance for promoting development in an increasingly complex world.

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Dynamic Institutional Adaptation Theory - A Novel Framework for Understanding Global Development Disparities.pdf