Resumen:
This study reassesses the relationship between regime type and economic
development by analysing how institutional capacity mediates this linkage
in six Latin American countries between 1980 and 2024. Although debates
often frame democracies as development-enhancing and authoritarian
regimes as either efficient or unstable, Latin America’s institutional
heterogeneity, commodity dependence, and political volatility reveal that
regime labels alone cannot account for divergent development trajectories.
Using a Structured-Focused Comparison within a qualitative comparative
case study design, the research applies standardised analytical questions
across cases and draws on triangulated quantitative indicators and
qualitative evidence. Structured-Focused Comparison qualitative
Comparative Case Study was used. All the cases were examined with the
aid of standardised questions on regime type, institutional capacity and
development indicators, backed up by triangulated qualitative and
quantitative data. Divergent development outcomes cannot be explained by
regime type. Strong institutions favour democracies, whereas weak
institutional competencies demise both democratic and authoritarian
systems. The outcomes of authoritarian and hybrid regimes are mixed,
whereas institutional strength always leads to stability and development
over time. Institutional capacity rather than regime type is what determines
the developmental pathways in Latin America.