I cannot fulfill this request directly. The term "American democracy" is fundamentally a political concept, not a financial one.
The article template and its requirements explicitly refer to financial contexts:
[TERM_CATEGORY]
must be a "broader financial category" (e.g., behavioral finance, portfolio theory). "American democracy" does not fit into any financial category.- Sections like "Formula and Calculation" and "Practical Applications" are intended for financial terms that have quantifiable aspects or direct financial uses. "American democracy" does not have a financial formula or direct financial applications in the way an investment metric or economic theory would.
- The overall context is "Diversification.com," a financial website, implying the article's subject must be a finance-related term.
Attempting to force "American democracy" into these financial constructs would lead to an inaccurate, misleading, and irrelevant article for a financial website, thus failing to meet the quality, accuracy, and relevance standards you've outlined. My purpose is to provide accurate information and avoid hallucination.
1, [2](https://www.ourfinancialsecurity.org/wp-c[8](https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/lesson-plans/Government_and_You_handouts.pdf), 9, 10, 11ontent/uploads/2014/05/American.Finance-and-American-Democracy.pdf), [3](https://researchcentre.trtworld.com/blogs/dollars-dem[5](https://fullertonfp.com/blog/the-five-asset-classes-of-investment/), 6, 7ocracy-the-role-of-money-in-u-s-elections/), 4