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===Late state formation=== The conditions that enabled the emergence of modern states in Europe were different for other [[country|countries]] that started this process later. As a result, many of these states lack effective capabilities to tax and extract revenue from their citizens, which derives in problems like corruption, tax evasion and low economic growth. Unlike the European case, late state formation occurred in a context of limited international conflict that diminished the incentives to tax and increase military spending. Also, many of these states emerged from colonization in a state of poverty and with institutions designed to extract natural resources, which have made more difficult to form states. European colonization also defined many arbitrary borders that mixed different cultural groups under the same national identities, which has made difficult to build states with legitimacy among all the population, since some states have to compete for it with other forms of political identity.<ref name="Samuels" /> As a complement to this argument, [[Joel S. Migdal|Migdal]] gives a historical account on how sudden social changes in the Third World during the [[Industrial Revolution]] contributed to the formation of weak states. The expansion of international trade that started around 1850, brought profound changes in Africa, Asia and Latin America that were introduced with the objective of assure the availability of raw materials for the European market. These changes consisted in: i) reforms to landownership laws with the objective of integrate more lands to the international economy, ii) increase in the taxation of peasants and little landowners, as well as collecting of these taxes in cash instead of in kind as was usual up to that moment and iii) the introduction of new and less costly modes of transportation, mainly railroads. As a result, the traditional forms of social control became obsolete, deteriorating the existing institutions and opening the way to the creation of new ones, that not necessarily lead these countries to build strong states.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Strong societies and weak states: state-society relations and state capabilities in the Third World |last=Migdal |first=Joel |year=1988 |pages=Chapter 2}}</ref> This fragmentation of the social order induced a political logic in which these states were captured to some extent by "strongmen", who were capable to take advantage of the above-mentioned changes and that challenge the sovereignty of the state. As a result, these decentralization of social control impedes to consolidate strong states.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Strong societies and weak states: state-society relations and state capabilities in the Third World |last=Migdal |first=Joel |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1988 |pages=Chapter 8}}</ref>
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