Bureaucratic Representation and State Responsiveness during Times of Crisis: The 1918 Pandemic in India
Guo Xu
Abstract
Abstract I combine personnel records with vital statistics for 1910 to 1925 to study how bureaucratic representation affected mortality in 1,271 Indian towns during the 1918 influenza pandemic. Exploiting the rotation of senior colonial officers across districts and a cross-border comparison, towns headed by Indian (as opposed to British) district officers experienced 15 percentage points lower deaths. The lower mortality effects extended beyond the urban areas and coincided with greater responsiveness in relief provision. Bureaucratic representation can thus be a powerful way to increase state responsiveness during times of crisis.
Topics & Concepts
BureaucracyPandemicRepresentation (politics)State (computer science)Influenza pandemicColonialismGeographyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Development economicsDemographyPolitical scienceHistorySociologyMedicineLawEconomicsPoliticsDiseaseComputer scienceAlgorithmInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyAgricultural risk and resilienceGlobal Maternal and Child HealthGlobal Health Care Issues