149 results
Search Results
2. Policy coherence across Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals: Lessons from Finland.
- Author
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Ylönen, Matti and Salmivaara, Anna
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development ,SOCIAL responsibility of business ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,SUSTAINABILITY ,LABOR mobility - Abstract
Motivation: Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) expand the development agenda. While all major development actors support policy coherence for development (PCD), analysis has been lacking on how this can be achieved as the development agenda expands. We discuss the relationship between SDGs and PCD through a comprehensive case study from Finland. Purpose: To examine the coherence of Finland's foreign and development policy for achieving the SDGs, while leaving no one behind. Particular focus is given to policies related to the private sector's role in development, and attention is also paid to ministries other than the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. Approach and methods: We carried out interviews with policy‐makers and other stakeholders, and analysed relevant documents. We reviewed governmental high‐level policy statements, sectoral alignments, and development aid documents. We also reviewed the position papers that the Finnish Government had issued on European Union (EU) processes, particularly regarding development relating to the private sector. Findings: Finland has been uniquely positioned to advance PCD in its foreign policy, thanks to co‐ordination structures across government. Nonetheless, mainstreaming of the expanded development agenda has been largely limited to the Ministry for Foreign Affairs and its development policy department. The breadth of the SDG agenda has enabled individual targets to be cherry‐picked, with less attention paid to advancing the Agenda 2030 as a whole and to implementing its Leave No One Behind (LNOB) principle. Despite an institutional framework seemingly ideal for policy coherence, traditional sectoral divisions between development policy as a separate field and sustainability as an environmental issue, remain. Five factors in particular hindered policy coherence: (a) Finland's position papers to the EU on taxes and migration all but ignored Agenda 2030 commitments; (b) the Finnish emphasis on the private sector in development narrowed the considerations of development to economic growth; (c) sustainability was seen as green technology, with scant regard to social sustainability; (d) private firms interpreted the SDGs to mean that environmental sustainability could address human rights‐related concerns with corporate social responsibility initiatives; and (e) cuts to staffing in the Finnish Government stymied innovative thinking and working across departmental boundaries. Policy Implications: Finland is generally seen as a front‐runner in mainstreaming development issues, which makes it an interesting case. We outline the key challenges that Finland has faced in tackling PCD, which should be relevant for other Organisation for Economic Co‐operation and Development (OECD) countries as well. Many challenges related to PCD are political and organizational. As such, they are highly dependent on the particular institutional settings in each country. Our methodological approach could be replicated in other similar countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. State-Society Relations, Institutional Transformation and Economic Development in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Kalu, Kenneth
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,PROMULGATION (Law) ,COLONIES ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This paper examines the nature and origins of state-society relations in sub-Saharan Africa ( SSA). It traces the region's predatory state-society relations to slavery and colonialism and the concomitant extractive institutions, which are not conducive to sustainable economic development. Consequently, attempts to achieve sustainable development have been largely futile. The paper proposes a strategy for transforming the region's economic and governance institutions for inclusive and enduring growth and development. This strategy includes the promulgation and enforcement of coherent international codes and guidelines for state-society relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Drivers of Economic Reform in Vietnam's Provinces.
- Author
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Schmitz, Hubert, Tuan, Dau Anh, Hang, Pham Thi Thu, and McCulloch, Neil
- Subjects
ECONOMIC reform ,ECONOMIC development ,PRIVATE sector ,BUSINESS enterprises ,INDUSTRIALIZATION - Abstract
Allowing provinces to find their own way forward was central to Vietnam's progress in institutional and economic development. This article examines who drives this process of economic reform and finds that, in those provinces making the most progress, the private sector played an important role, not against, but with government. Both national and foreign enterprises played a role, but small enterprises tended to be marginalised. Some of the best insights come from comparing provinces and observing how different alignments of interest influenced the reform process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Political Economy of Agricultural Extension Policy in Ethiopia: Economic Growth and Political Control.
- Author
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Berhanu, Kassahun and Poulton, Colin
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,AGRICULTURAL extension policy ,POLITICAL economic analysis ,ELECTIONS ,CAPITALISM - Abstract
This article argues that, in Ethiopia, the aim to transform the performance of smallholder agricultural production is driven by the twin imperatives of economic growth and political control. The agricultural extension programme - the largest and fastest growing in the continent - has been central to this strategy, and the unparalleled investment in the extension system has been driven by these twin imperatives. However, there are tensions between the objectives of stimulating agricultural growth, on the one hand, and extensively penetrating society and winning elections, on the other, and these may reduce the returns to this investment. Implications are drawn for wider debates on the reform of agricultural extension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Millennium Development Goals: Impact on national strategies and spending.
- Author
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Seyedsayamdost, Elham
- Subjects
POVERTY reduction ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy ,SOCIAL development - Abstract
Abstract: This study reviews the post‐2005 national development strategies of 50 countries from diverse income groups, geographical locations, human development tiers and official development assistance (ODA) levels to assess Millennium Development Goal (MDG) absorption into development planning. Reviewing Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) and non‐PRSP national strategies, the majority of the development plans have either adopted the MDGs as planning tools or ‘localized’ them in a meaningful way, using diverse adaptation strategies. A high correlation is detected between the income group, PRSP status and ODA reliance of countries, and their propensity to incorporate MDGs in their planning instruments. However, MDG alignment is not coterminous with greater pro‐poor or MDG‐oriented policies. Countries that have not integrated MDGs into their national plans were as likely to allocate government funds to social sectors as MDG aligners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. An analysis of donor engagement with education policy development in Lao PDR from 1991 to 2000.
- Author
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Phommalangsy, Phouvanh and Honan, Eileen
- Subjects
BASIC education ,EDUCATION policy ,POST-Cold War Period ,PUBLIC officers ,ECONOMIC development ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
This paper describes the relationship between donor agencies and government during the development of Lao basic education policy in the post-Cold War period, 1991-2000. We argue that Laos had only recently been 're- born' from colonial regimes, and was thus unable to resist or mediate donor policy agendas and donors who acted on behalf of economically developed nations. The nature of the power relationship between donor and government is explored through an analysis of policy developed at that time as well as the perceptions of aid conditionalities, as recalled by government officials and those working in the aid sector at that time. These perceptions were gathered through interviews conducted by one of the authors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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8. Erratic Development in Kenya: Questions from the East Asian Miracle.
- Author
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Nyanjom, Othieno and Ong'olo, David
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EQUALITY ,POLITICAL stability ,KENYAN economy - Abstract
At first sight, Kenya seems to have had more scope than other African countries to emulate the development trajectory described in the World Bank study, The East Asian Miracle. These assets did not, however, result in sustained growth - an outcome this article aims to explain using a negative turning point in the early 1990s. The most striking difference between the East Asian and Kenyan experiences was the acceptance - and even exacerbation - of socio-economic inequality as an immutable reality of development, plus the weak belief in the integrity of Kenyan institutions. A constitutional review process is one possible political solution for this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Private Provision of Infrastructure in Emerging Markets: Do Institutions Matter?
- Author
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Banerjee, Sudeshna Ghosh, Oetzel, Jennifer M., and Ranganathan, Rupa
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,INDIVIDUAL investors ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development ,PRIVATE sector - Abstract
Governments in developing countries have encouraged private sector investment to meet the growing demand for infrastructure. According to institutional theory, the role of institutions is paramount in private sector development. A longitudinal dataset of 40 developing economies between 1990 and 2000 is used to test empirically how different institutional structures affect private investment in infrastructure, in particular its volume and frequency. The results indicate that property rights and bureaucratic quality play a significant role in promoting private infrastructure investment. Interestingly, they also suggest that countries with higher levels of corruption attract greater private participation in infrastructure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Introducing Research into Policy: Lessons from District Studies of Dryland Development in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Mortimore, Michael and Tiffen, Mary
- Subjects
ECONOMIC policy ,RESEARCH ,ARID regions ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This article describes the chief findings of research carried out in four African dryland areas to investigate the validity of the authors' ‘Machakos hypothesis’, and to derive lessons on appropriate enabling policies. The findings were subsequently submitted to in-country validation and dissemination exercises. The lessons learnt from these in regard to introducing research findings into country policy dialogues are set against the background of current discussion of this issue. The article also discusses uptake at the international level, because it tends to be at this level that development paradigms and practices are formulated and promoted into countries through donor and agency actions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Management of the international development aid system: The Case of Tanzania.
- Author
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Furukawa, Mitsuaki
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,ECONOMIC development ,POVERTY reduction ,TANZANIAN politics & government - Abstract
Abstract: This article tries to clarify Government behaviours as to how to manage aid in Tanzania. Contrary to the Organisation for Economic Co‐operation and Development (OECD) Development Assistance Committee (DAC) donor intentions, the development aid structure, carefully constructed under the poverty reduction regime in Tanzania, has led to Tanzanian‐owned initiatives toward a national development plan (NDP). Furthermore, this article shows that, in the process of creating an international development aid system, the Tanzanian Government has learned to manage aid in a recipient‐driven manner not only from DAC donors, but also from China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Myths and realities about input subsidies in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Ghins, Léopold, Mas Aparisi, Alban, and Balié, Jean
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL development ,AGRICULTURE ,IRRIGATION ,PUBLIC spending ,ECONOMIC development ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
Using a recent public expenditure dataset, this article proposes a 'reality check' of the level and composition of input subsidies in nine African countries between 2006 and 2013. Results show that input subsidies (1) received close to 35% of agricultural-specific expenditure on average and (2) cover a variety of interventions, including investments in capital, such as on-farm irrigation, and in on-farm services, such as inspection or training. Further, the figures show that input subsidies tended to become entrenched in agricultural budgets over time, leading to sub-optimal execution rates, and were primarily funded by the national taxpayer, while donors invested more in public goods. Findings confirm that input subsidies crowded out other spending categories likely to be more supportive of long-term agricultural development objectives. The article concludes that the political economy of input subsidies should be directed to making more concrete efforts to attain a better balance of public expenditure on agriculture. Furthermore, policy-makers should aim to increase the efficiency and policy coherence of input subsidies, since merely abolishing them is likely to be unfeasible in the short term. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Engendering Growth Diagnostics: Examining Constraints to Private Investment and Entrepreneurship.
- Author
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Roncolato, Leanne, Reksten, Nicholas, and Grown, Caren
- Subjects
GENDER inequality ,SEX discrimination in education ,DECISION trees ,EDUCATION & society ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP - Abstract
The growth constraints diagnostic is a framework that seeks to help countries identify 'binding' constraints to private investment and entrepreneurship. Curiously absent from the diagnoses of the 31 countries to which this framework has been applied is any mention of gender gaps. This is surprising given the substantial literature providing evidence that gender gaps in education, income, employment, resource control and access affect economic growth and well-being. This article 'engenders' the standard growth diagnostic process through disaggregating key variables by sex, reinterpreting nodes in the decision tree to reflect how they are intrinsically gendered, and adding new branches and nodes. It provides a theoretical framework for applying the gender growth diagnostic to help practitioners adopt it in country studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Trapped between tragedies and miracles: Misunderstanding African economic growth.
- Author
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Jerven, Morten
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC activity ,ECONOMICS & literature ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
The author comments on literature about the failure of economic growth in Africa. Topics discussed include his argument on the wrong emphasis of cross-sectional literature on income and growth and his suggestion in the book "Africa: Why Economists Get It Wrong," on the need for a change in emphasis on the study of economics at the macro level in Africa.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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15. Open Data on a Closed Shop? Assessing the potential of transparency initiatives with a focus on efforts to strengthen capacity development support.
- Author
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Keijzer, Niels
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,DECISION making ,SELF-evaluation - Abstract
Despite strong political commitment, actual gains in improving accountability in development co-operation have been limited. Main reasons for this include the low level of transparency and high number of actors, as well as the limitations of the self-reported and input-oriented OECD reporting system. Efforts through the International Aid Transparency Initiative ( IATI) and related transparency initiatives are ill-equipped to change this given their decision to adhere to the same system. This article uses the specific area of support to capacity development to illustrate this. While further disaggregation of reporting on technical co-operation could respond to a transparency gap, overcoming the accountability gap requires moving beyond promoting 'supply-side' reform and re-engaging in efforts to promote collective action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Are There Myths on Road Impact and Transport in Sub-Saharan Africa?
- Author
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Beuran, Monica, Gachassin, Marie, and Raballand, Gaël
- Subjects
POVERTY reduction ,HIGHWAY planning ,ROADS -- Economic aspects ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
Large investments in road infrastructure continue to be high on the agenda of many African countries, only a few of which have actually amended their investment strategy. In many cases, there seems to be a preference for a status quo that can easily be explained by political-economy factors driving policies in the sector. After presenting data on the state of roads in sub-Saharan Africa (length, density, condition), this article demonstrates how most countries' transport strategies are based on certain misperceptions and recommends better prioritisation of investments, better procurement and contract management, better projects implementation and better monitoring to improve the developmental impact of recent road investments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Governance and Economic Transformation in Taiwan: The Role of Politics.
- Author
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Lauridsen, Laurids S.
- Subjects
TAIWANESE economy ,TAIWANESE politics & government, 2000- ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy ,PUBLIC administration ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
This article analyses the strengths and weaknesses of the developmental-state approach as compared with a broader and more flexible developmentalgovernance approach - in relation to economic transformation in a single case country, Taiwan. It argues that both approaches have strong and weak points, and comes down in favour of the view that it is only through a 'thick' study of political forces, processes and circumstances that the reasoning behind developmental policies and institutions can be understood and the processes of economic transformation explained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. "Securitized" UK aid projects in Africa: Evidence from Kenya, Nigeria and South Sudan.
- Author
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Petrikova, Ivica and Lazell, Melita
- Subjects
NATIONAL income ,GROSS income ,NATIONAL security ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Motivation: In 2020, the UK Department for International Development (DFID) was merged with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) as the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO). This policy move strengthens the trend to "securitize" development, whereby the provision of aid is motivated by national security concerns. Purpose: Many researchers have raised concerns about the securitization of aid and its consequences for development, but little research has examined its impact on aid‐recipient countries. Approach and Methods: This study evaluates 144 securitized aid projects implemented by DFID between 2000 and 2018 in Kenya, Nigeria and South Sudan, using the Organisation for Economic Co‐operation and Development (OECD) evaluation criteria of relevance, effectiveness, impact, and sustainability. Findings: Our analysis finds that although most of the projects assessed were "relevant", i.e. formally aligned with recipient and funders' objectives, many struggled to achieve their intended outputs ("effectiveness"). Few of the projects had a positive "impact". We conclude that the securitized projects reviewed did not significantly strengthen the recipient countries' institutions, stability, or security but had some negative side effects. Policy Implications: In view of the merger of DFID with the FCO and the decision to reduce aid from 0.7% to 0.5% of Gross National Income (GNI), the UK is likely to draw an even closer connection between domestic security priorities and its development aid. In view of our empirical findings, the UK government needs to be more aware of the limitations of development interventions undertaken in the name of security and consider other means of enabling development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Brazil and the Shifting Consensus on Development Co-operation: Salutary Diversions from the 'Aid-effectiveness' Trail?
- Author
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Cabral, Lídia, Russo, Giuliano, and Weinstock, Julia
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,HEALTH care reform ,TECHNICAL analysis (Investment analysis) ,INVESTMENT analysis ,TEACHING aids - Abstract
Emerging economies emphasise horizontality and mutual opportunity in their relationship with developing countries, promising an alternative to the failings of traditional North-South co-operation. This article draws on research on Brazil's technical co-operation and its health dimension to compare the Brazilian model with established aid-effectiveness' principles and to discuss the appropriateness of the latter as standards against which to appraise emerging donors' co-operation. The analysis shows that, despite progress towards greater dialogue between traditional and emerging donors, the 'aid-effectiveness' framework still falls short of capturing the idiosyncrasies of South-South co-operation and therefore offers an incomplete international standard on how best to conduct development co-operation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. What Did US$18 bn Achieve? The 2005 Debt Relief to Nigeria.
- Author
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Dijkstra, Geske
- Subjects
NIGERIAN economy ,ECONOMIC development ,DEBT relief ,PUBLIC debts ,CONDITIONALITY (International relations) ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
Since 2003 Nigeria's economic growth has been consistently above 6% and has been driven by non-oil sectors. This article attempts to assess the contribution of the 2005 debt-relief agreement to this higher growth. The agreement eliminated Nigeria's US$30 billion debt to Paris Club creditors who cancelled US$18 bn, while Nigeria paid back US$12 bn. The article traces the three possible impact channels of debt relief, namely, the flow (reduced debt service), the stock (removal of debt overhang) and the conditionality channel, and comes to the conclusion that the debt-relief agreement played a key role in the country's improved economic performance, in particular through successful conditionality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. COVID‐19's impacts on global value chains, as seen in the apparel industry.
- Author
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Castañeda‐Navarrete, Jennifer, Hauge, Jostein, and López‐Gómez, Carlos
- Subjects
VALUE chains ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CLOTHING industry ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,INDUSTRIAL workers ,ABUSED women ,PORTFOLIO diversification ,SOLAR cell efficiency - Abstract
Motivation: The COVID‐19 pandemic has massively disrupted international trade and global value chains. Impacts, however, differ across regions and industries. This article contributes to a better understanding of the scale of disruptions to industries and value chains integral to the economies of and livelihoods in developing countries, and what role policy can play to mitigate harm. Purpose: This article aims to: (1) analyse and characterize disruptions to the global apparel value chain caused by the COVID‐19 pandemic, focusing on how developing countries have been impacted, and; (2) identify key policies to support a resilient, inclusive and sustainable recovery. Approach and methods: We review COVID‐19 related reports published by international and non‐governmental organizations, international trade and production statistics, industry surveys and media reports. We frame our analysis predominantly within the Global Value Chains literature. Findings: The global apparel value chain has been severely disrupted by the pandemic, owing to direct effects of sickness on workers in factories, reduced output of materials—cloth, thread, etc.—used to fabricate clothing, and to reduced demand for apparel in high‐income countries. Developing countries are suffering disproportionately in terms of profits, wages, job security and job safety. Women workers in the apparel chain have been hit especially hard, not only because most workers in the chain are women, but also because they have experienced increasing unpaid care work and higher risk of gender‐based violence. Policy implications: Five key areas of policy to support a resilient, inclusive and sustainable recovery stand out: (1) delivering emergency responses to ensure firm survival and the protection of workers' livelihoods; (2) reformulating FDI attraction strategies and promoting market diversification; (3) supporting technology adoption and skills development; (4) deploying labour standards to improve workers' conditions and strengthening social protection systems; and (5) adopting gender‐sensitive responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Policy Experiments, Democratic Ownership and Development Assistance.
- Author
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Faust, Jörg
- Subjects
FINANCIAL aid ,DEMOCRACY ,PROPERTY rights ,DEBTOR & creditor ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In an effort to enhance the impact of development aid, recipients are called on to provide democratically sustained ‘ownership’ for development policies, and donors to align their interventions with these ownership-dictated strategies of their partners. This article illustrates the weaknesses of such an approach. From a political-economy perspective, severe tensions exist between concepts of democratic ownership, on the one hand, and the experimental and iterative organisation of a society's encompassing interests in democratic settings, on the other. These tensions are even more pronounced in emerging democracies, making democratic ownership as a prerequisite for aid effectiveness an illusion, and provoking the re-emergence of traditional donor-recipient problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Not by Rent Alone: Analysing the Pro-Poor Functions of Small-Scale Fisheries in Developing Countries.
- Author
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Béné, Christophe, Hersoug, Bjørn, and Allison, Edward H.
- Subjects
SMALL-scale fisheries ,RENT (Economic theory) ,MACROECONOMICS ,DEVELOPING countries ,POVERTY ,INCOMES policy (Economics) ,ECONOMIC models ,HOUSEHOLDS ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The dominant view in academic and policy arenas is increasingly one in which the major contribution of capture fisheries to development should be derived from the capacity of society to maximise the economic rent of fishery resources. Drawing upon empirical experience from the South, this article highlights the potentially disastrous consequences that a universal implementation of the rent-maximisation model would have in developing countries, and argues that a more gradual approach would be preferable. The welfare function of small-scale fisheries, namely, their capacities to provide labour and cash income to resource-poor households, should be preserved until the appropriate macroeconomic conditions for rent-maximisation and redistribution are fulfilled. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Debt-Relief Effectiveness and Institution-Building.
- Author
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Presbitero, Andrea F.
- Subjects
DEBT relief ,DEBT cancellation ,INSTITUTION building ,ECONOMIC development ,DEBTOR & creditor ,FOREIGN loans ,ECONOMIC conditions in developing countries ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This article provides new evidence on the effects of recent debt-relief programmes on different macroeconomic indicators in developing countries, focusing on the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs). The relationship between debt relief and institutional change is also investigated to assess whether donors are moving towards ex-post governance conditionality. Results show that debt relief is only weakly associated with subsequent improvements in economic performance but is correlated with increasing domestic debt which undermines the positive achievements in reducing external debt service. There is also evidence that donors are moving towards a more sensible allocation of debt forgiveness, rewarding countries which have better policies and institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Aid Paradigm for Poverty Reduction: Does It Make Sense?
- Author
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Weiss, John
- Subjects
ECONOMIC models ,ECONOMIC policy ,ECONOMIC development ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,INVESTMENT policy ,ECONOMIC reform ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,WELFARE economics ,PUBLIC administration - Abstract
Thinking on economic policy for development has undergone many shifts in response to the perceived weak results of earlier adjustment reforms. A new donor consensus has emerged based around the central themes of economic growth, good governance and social development. This article examines the logic behind this new aid paradigm, revealing a nuanced story with country circumstances playing a critical role and particular interventions varying in impact. For example, growth does not always lead to gains for the poor that match the national average; public expenditure needs to be targeted to achieve social development, but effective targeting is difficult; governance reform may be critical but there is no simple governance blueprint, and the corruption-growth association need not always be negative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Developmental States in the New Millennium: Concepts and Challenges for a New Aid Agenda.
- Author
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Fritz, Verena and Menocal, Alina Rocha
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,POLITICAL community ,GOVERNMENT policy ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,URBAN planning ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,POLITICAL planning ,POLITICAL participation ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The developmental state is back at the centre of the international policy debate. But policy-makers still have much to learn from the large research-based literature on the subject. In introducing a theme issue of DPR on this subject, this article provides an overview of three central topics: the relationship between the project of building or rebuilding effective states and the ‘good governance’ agenda; the role of the international aid community in stimulating or hindering state-building; and the search for a way forward which incorporates awareness of the variety of successful development models and of the role that aid inevitably plays in the incentive structure of state elites in poor developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The ‘New Minimalist Approach’ to Private-Sector Development: A Critical Assessment.
- Author
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Altenburg, Tilman and von Drachenfels, Christian
- Subjects
POLITICAL planning ,PROPERTY rights ,ECONOMIC development ,PRIVATE sector ,PUBLIC administration ,BUSINESS - Abstract
Recent literature on private-sector development emphasises the need to establish a ‘level playing field’ and tends to disregard selective supportive interventions. The most commonly highlighted elements are administrative simplification and effective property rights policies, with business services largely left to private providers - what we call the ‘new minimalist approach’ (NMA). However, the NMA is based on certain unrealistic assumptions and is barely backed by empirical evidence. A range of complementary public policies is needed to create competitive sectors and overcome internal constraints, especially in small-scale economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Enhancing export competitiveness by deeper integration: The case of the East African Community.
- Author
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Si Tou, Wai Kit
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL clusters ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,BALANCE of trade ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Motivation: Many African countries experience persistent trade deficits and are in need of better export strategy. While the East African Community (EAC) performs best in regional integration among the Regional Economic Communities of Africa, it is important to formulate a comprehensive export strategy that harnesses the benefits of deeper regional integration. Purpose: This article analyses the productive capabilities of the five Partner States of the EAC to investigate the potential benefits of greater economic integration. It identifies products that have potential to boost economic development and suggests a regional export strategy. Approach and Methods: The product space framework is used to analyse national productive capabilities. In particular, the trade‐off between the potential benefit of developing a complex product and the difficulty to do so is considered. Findings: Deeper regional integration in the EAC would create opportunities to develop new products and to enhance the competitiveness of existing industries. The bloc could produce more diverse and more sophisticated products. Specifically, the analysis highlights the potential of agro‐processing and chemicals, which is generally in line with the strategic regional industries stated in the EAC Industrialisation Strategy 2012–2032. Policy Implications: Deeper regional integration can help develop products. EAC countries should strengthen co‐operation and leverage their expertise to develop products in clusters of related goods, rather than adopting a scattershot approach, thereby reaping economies of scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Financial Sector Regulation: The Lessons of the Asian Crisis.
- Author
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Brownbridge, Martin and Kirkpatrick, Colin
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC indicators ,FINANCIAL institutions ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Focuses on the lessons of the East Asian crisis for financial sector regulation particularly in the context of developing economies. Role of the financial system in the development process and the functions it performs in facilitating efficient resource use and economic growth; Causes of financial distress; Failures in prudential regulation and supervision in East Asia.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A critical assessment of anti‐corruption strategies for economic development in sub‐Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Senu, Oluwafemi
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC administration ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,CORRUPTION ,NEPOTISM - Abstract
Motivation: Many countries in sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA) experience thwarted economic development and corrupt public administration. As the United Nations Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) focuses on implementation mechanisms in SSA, there is a need to examine the causes of the setbacks affecting these mechanisms, looking at the current trends of corruption and their impact on socioeconomic development. Purpose: This article focuses on assessing setbacks in anti‐corruption strategies to advance economic development in SSA, primarily looking at how and in what conditions UNCAC prevents corruption and manages responses in SSA. Approach: This article adopts a descriptive and an explanatory perspective, using case studies of Kenya and Nigeria to explain and show how far the objectives of anti‐corruption strategies have been met, and assessing the causes of setbacks. In this context, the article also explores the challenges facing the UK's Department for International Development (DFID). Conclusions: Socioeconomic development in SSA is hard to separate from maladministration and large‐scale corruption. The findings reveal the gravity of this impact and its interrelated factors of "active" and "benign" corruption. This article concludes that for SSA to create sustainable economic environments, the causes of the failure to stamp out corruption need to be addressed, and dishonesty, maladministration, illicit activities, nepotism curtailed, along with corrupt influences on anti‐corruption legislation. Policy implications: The article concludes that if governance does not prevent the failures of anti‐corruption strategies, an interventionist response will only weaken national endeavours, making it difficult to reach UNCAC's vision of sustainable and corruption‐free economic environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The impact of unequal regional distribution of fiscal resources on China's post‐reform economic growth.
- Author
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Huang, Jr‐Tsung and Chang, Ming‐Lei
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,GINI coefficient ,COMMUNITY development ,FEDERAL government - Abstract
Motivation: The relationship between unequal fiscal resources among regions and China's economic growth remains unclear due to its possibly different short‐ and long‐run directions. This study considers the role of unequal fiscal resources among regions in China's economic growth. Purpose: The article develops an empirical model to investigate the effect of unequal regional distribution of fiscal resources on China's economic growth in the short and long run in the post‐reform period. Approach and Methods: A time‐series data during the 1979–2010 period is used, adopting the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) approach plus co‐integration with two indicators of inequality, the GINI coefficient (GINI) and coefficient of variance (CV), calculated from different components of provincial fiscal revenue. Six model specifications of the ARDL plus co‐integration equation are estimated. Findings: The primary finding is that, in the short run, China's regional fiscal distribution inequality has a negative one‐year lagged effect on its economic growth as the fiscal subsidy from central government is considered. However, the long‐run equilibrium relationship between fiscal inequality and economic growth in China is positive during the research period. Policy Implications: As China is pursuing sustainable economic growth and trying ultimately to achieve equal regional development, this study thus suggests that China should continue to support the principle of 'let some people grow rich first', perhaps implying that some regions should have more fiscal resources to develop successfully first. This will eventually benefit the country's overall economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Policy strategies for economic development in Cuba: A simulation model analysis.
- Author
-
Castellacci, Fulvio and Dizyee, Kanar
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy ,ECONOMIC reform ,SIMULATION methods & models ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The economic reforms implemented in Cuba since 2008 do not adequately deal with the structural issues that hamper the country's economic development. The article presents a system dynamics model to investigate Cuba's development process, and a simulation analysis to compare different policy scenarios that may be realized in the future as economic reforms will continue. The results indicate that the most effective development policy would be to combine active public policies to enhance the research and development sector on the one hand, and to foster the emergence of an efficient private sector that will develop the capital infrastructure of the economy on the other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The microfinance promise—can it be kept? A macro perspective.
- Author
-
Alimukhamedova, Nargiza
- Subjects
MICROFINANCE ,INCOME inequality ,POVERTY reduction ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
After five decades of rapid expansion of microfinance worldwide, little is known about its aggregate effects and whether the "microfinance promise" of poverty reduction holds at the macro level. Challenging questions have arisen. Here we explore the dynamic response of microfinance on economic growth, financial deepening and income inequality. Countries are grouped into three broad clusters (stable, moderate and poor) based on macro‐institutional variables. Our results show that microfinance has a significant long‐term ability to affect the broader economy. However, the impact and dynamics of microfinance differ substantially across macro‐institutional environments. It grows in weaker environments, reaches its peak in developing economies, and then gradually "dies out" in more stable economies. While there is evidence of a positive impact of microfinance at the aggregate level, the response is different depending on whether countries are poor, moderately developed or economically stable. Once countries climb up the macro‐institutional "ladder," microfinance can take a different shape and its relationship with other macroeconomic fundamentals can change. Our results indicate that microfinance has the strongest effect when the external environment is supportive and proactive; in weak environments, microfinance cannot grow sufficiently. Therefore, more attention should be given to supporting the socioeconomic dimensions of economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Ethiopia's developmental state: A building stability framework assessment.
- Author
-
Dejene, Melisew and Cochrane, Logan
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy ,PRIME ministers ,HUMAN growth - Abstract
Ethiopia has been lauded for its economic growth and progress in human development indicators. For some, that success is rooted in the developmental state approach advocated by the government. For others, the theory of the developmental state and the practice in Ethiopia were often at odds. Up until 2018, ideas that challenged the state and its approaches were not welcome, and politicians, academics and journalists were jailed for expressing alternative views. However, this appears to have changed, and in June 2018 the Deputy Prime Minister called for debate on the developmental state model. This article explores Ethiopia's developmental state model using the building stability framework, analysing its ability to establish fair power structures, foster inclusive economic growth, develop conflict‐resolution mechanisms, create effective and legitimate institutions, and enable a supportive regional environment. We find the developmental state was effective in a number of ways, but that this modality of governance appears to have passed its peak of securing advantage in Ethiopia. A shift from the developmental state to developmental democracy appears to be underway. Decision‐making and economic policies need to align with this change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Institutional design of voluntary sustainability standards systems: Evidence from a new database.
- Author
-
Fiorini, Matteo, Hoekman, Bernard, Jansen, Marion, Schleifer, Philip, Solleder, Olga, Taimasova, Regina, and Wozniak, Joseph
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,VALUE chains ,STAKEHOLDER theory ,DATABASES - Abstract
Voluntary sustainability standards (VSS) have become a significant element of the governance of international trade and production. Even though VSS are not mandatory (required by law), in practice they are often necessary for producers to participate in global value chains. Finally, VSS are often considered costly for producers. This article provides an overview of the global VSS landscape, and addresses the following questions: how producer‐friendly are VSS, and how do their practices towards producers vary with relevant features of VSS institutional design? The analysis is empirical, and it is based on a data collection project called Standards Map (SM), launched in 2011 by the International Trade Centre (ITC). The analysis covers a population of up to 180 VSS. This large‐n approach allows for a macro‐perspective which complements the existing literature characterized by micro‐level studies. Our analysis documents a significant heterogeneity in producer‐friendly practices across VSS. We find that participation in meta‐governance organizations (such as ISEAL full membership) is strongly associated with producer‐friendly practices. Moreover, the location of headquarters in Organisation for Economic Co‐operation and Development (OECD) member countries, the engagement of buyers in the board or management of the scheme and the influence of producers in decision‐making are also positively associated with our measures of producer friendliness, although these relationships are found to be less robust. The dimension of VSS we have focused on is just one element of the information contained in the SM database. Other relevant dimensions of standards systems, such as the structure of requirements, their product scope—and other aspects of institutional design, such as verification procedures, stakeholder engagement, harmonization or convergence vs. competition between different schemes—can all be analysed using the database. We hope the descriptive analysis undertaken in this article will help the research community to make better use of this source of information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Global Governance, neoliberalism and national responses: The case of Bangladesh's ready‐made garment (RMG) sector.
- Author
-
Khan, Mohammed Adil and Milne, Grace
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,ECONOMIC policy ,FOREIGN investments ,ECONOMIC development ,CAPITAL financing - Abstract
This article on the ready‐made garment (RMG) sector of Bangladesh shows how over‐reliance on foreign capital for development financing and deregulated investment—a hallmark of neoliberal economic arrangements—undermines the incorporation of SDGs' and INGOs' equity principles, contributing to biased policy responses yielding unequal outcomes. The article cautions that while countries prioritize economic growth over social and environmental nourishment and continue to adopt neoliberal economic policies to promote economic growth, inequity is unavoidable, if not inevitable. Thus, the way forward may be to shift the focus of 'development' from the economy to society, to building 'good societies' where institutions and strategies, including those that contribute to economic growth, are organized such that these complement not compromise the evolution of such societies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Great walls over African rivers: Chinese engagement in African hydropower projects.
- Author
-
Brautigam, Deborah and Hwang, Jyhjong
- Subjects
WATER power ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,CONSTRUCTION projects ,ECONOMIC development ,HYDROELECTRIC power plants ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
Recent acceleration of Chinese engagement in African hydropower is attracting increasing attention and concern. Yet there is scant research and little reliable data on this engagement. This article analyses Chinese hydropower engagement based on a new, verified dataset. We examined over 100 projects reported by the media and lists compiled by other organizations, amassing case studies for each project using desk research, interviews and field visits. We demonstrate that Chinese engagement in African hydropower is often overestimated in both numbers and value. Further, misunderstanding and myths abound regarding Chinese financing and construction practices. This evidence‐based understanding provides a firmer foundation for advocacy, research and efforts by other companies and funding agencies to co‐operate with Chinese actors in this controversial sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Does the sectoral composition of growth affect child stunting reductions?
- Author
-
Mary, Sébastien, Shaw, Kelsey, and Paloma, Sergio Gomez y
- Subjects
STUNTED growth ,ECONOMIC development ,FOOD security ,FOOD production ,FOOD consumption - Abstract
This article uses a natural experiment based on random and exogenous variations in temperature to examine whether the sectoral composition of growth has an effect on child stunting reductions. Agricultural growth is central to food security strategies in developing countries, as it is often considered the most effective way to fight (child) undernutrition. The evidence base to support the putative superior role of agricultural growth is, however, relatively weak, possibly because studies have ignored growth faltering. Accounting for the latter, we find that while both agricultural and non‐agricultural growth decrease stunting, agricultural growth is significantly superior to non‐agricultural growth in this regard. The estimated impacts are large, in that a 10% increase in agricultural GDP per capita reduces child stunting by 9.6% (as opposed to 8.4% for non‐agricultural). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Participatory shaping of community futures in e‐waste processing hubs: Complexity, conflict and stewarded convergence in a Palestinian context.
- Author
-
Davis, John‐Michael and Garb, Yaakov
- Subjects
JUNK trade ,COMMUNITIES ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This article describes an unconventional participatory development approach carried out in an informal e‐waste hub in South‐West Hebron, an area that has collected and processed the bulk of Israeli e‐waste for over a decade. Our approach contributes to the critique and recovery of community representation in participatory development and the search for ways to facilitate representative community engagement. Specifically, we describe our use of a novel Delphi‐like method that allowed us to facilitate a broadly endorsed development trajectory within a heterogeneous and conflicted community. We show how the results yielded by this approach diverged from those that were likely to emerge from more facile forms of participation in ways that are important for other similar e‐waste hubs internationally, which face a destructive status quo on the one hand, or the economically ruinous international policies that ban e‐waste trade from "developed" to "developing" countries on the other. Despite real tensions and cleavages within the affected communities, the process described facilitated a shift from deadlocked environmental versus livelihood positions towards building capacity and regulating existing informal e‐waste trades to preserve livelihoods dependent on these. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Follow the leader! The peer effect in aid supply decisions.
- Author
-
De Matteis, Alessandro
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,MARKET volatility ,ECONOMIC development ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) - Abstract
Abstract: This study assesses the existence of imitative behaviour among donors in terms of their aid supply. The urgency in addressing this subject is motivated by an increasing degree of aid volatility and unpredictability which may be linked to this imitative behaviour. Our results highlight that while any connection among donor peers is a potential channel for the transmission of aid volatility, the extent of such volatility decreases significantly in the presence of established imitative behaviour. This result suggests that the promotion of donor imitative behaviour would contribute to containing the current and growing trend of volatility in aid supply. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Does foreign bank entry contribute to financial development? Examining the role of income thresholds.
- Author
-
Gopalan, Sasidaran
- Subjects
FOREIGN banking industry ,EMERGING markets ,PER capita ,ECONOMIC development ,FINANCIAL institutions - Abstract
Abstract: This article examines the relationship between foreign bank entry and financial development in a panel framework covering 57 emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs) between 1995 and 2009. Using various measures of financial sector deepening, the article also explores the degree to which the relationship between foreign bank entry and financial sector depth varies by different income thresholds of the EMDEs. The empirical findings suggest that while foreign banks have a direct positive impact in furthering financial depth, the marginal effects of foreign bank entry diminish over time with greater levels of economic development. In other words, the impact of foreign bank entry tends to diminish as the per capita income of the country rises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Social cohesion in Rwanda: Results from a public good experiment.
- Author
-
Stage, Jesper and Uwera, Claudine
- Subjects
SOCIAL cohesion ,GROUP identity ,ECONOMIC development ,TWENTY-first century ,SOCIAL history ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
Abstract: We describe a public good experiment, a type of economic experiment commonly used to examine feelings of prosociality—that is, behaviour which is positive, helpful and intended to promote social acceptance and friendship—and community cohesion, carried out in Rwanda. Contributions in different parts of the country are affected by the local intensity of the 1994 genocide, with more generous contributions being made in areas where violence was greater. This supports earlier research indicating that conflict experience leads to greater prosociality. However, we also find that people who have not, themselves, been targets of violence give lower contributions than people who have. The considerable group‐related and regional differences in social behaviour may have implications for the country's policies to deal with social cohesion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. State‐led industrial development, structural transformation and elite‐led plunder: Angola (2002–2013) as a developmental state.
- Author
-
Salah Ovadia, Jesse
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC reform ,ECONOMIC policy ,URBANIZATION ,ANGOLAN economic conditions - Abstract
Abstract: From 2002 to 2013, Angola engaged in large‐scale state‐led reconstruction and development alongside an elite‐led appropriation and seizure of national assets. Until the oil price shock, Angola had been succeeding in promoting rapid economic growth, and possibly even significant social development, alongside a massive grab of wealth and power by local elites. Today, though an economic crisis has taken hold, frequent predictions of the country's imminent collapse have yet to be fulfilled. This article reviews the state's development planning and expenditure with a focus on public investment and industrial development to determine to what extent Angola during this period might be considered a developmental or petro‐developmental state. It is argued that, while more significant than generally thought, petro‐developmental outcomes were and are limited by the autocratic and neopatrimonial tendencies of the Angolan elite. Nevertheless, limited success with structural transformation may have lasting effects. Following its long civil war, the conditions existed for Angola to follow a new path of state‐led development. Though it may now be more difficult, structural transformation and economic diversification remain the only path to economic and social development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Rwandan “home grown initiatives”: Illustrating inherent contradictions of the democratic developmental state.
- Author
-
Hasselskog, Malin
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,TWENTY-first century ,SOCIAL participation ,DWELLINGS ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
Abstract: The 21st‐century developmental state is envisaged as implying democratic participation. Rwanda both explicitly aspires to follow the developmental state example and eloquently ascribes to far‐reaching participatory ideals, and a number of development programmes, “home grown initiatives,” have been launched, allegedly reviving traditional participatory practices. Based on original material, this article analyzes local experiences of the participation entailed in some of these programmes. In the conclusion, the poor practice of participation reported is found to point to inherent contradiction of the idea of a democratic and participatory version of the developmental state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. New economic globalization, new industrial policy and late development in the 21st century: A critical analytical review.
- Author
-
Lauridsen, Laurids S.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC globalization ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ECONOMIC development ,VALUE chains ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
Abstract: After having been put aside for three decades, industrial policy has reappeared in the research and policy debate on economic development in the Global South. However, it has also been argued that fragmented and decentralized value chains have foreclosed the traditional role of industrial policy. The article reviews three strands of thinking, exploring to what extent and how one can align the call for new industrial policy with the expansion of global value chains? It shows how the research agenda can be moved forward by realigning contributions from global value chain scholarship with researchers who take their point of departure concerning new industrial policy in structural transformation, technological capability and innovation system thinking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. And yet they thrive!—Regaining the relevance of a transparency system.
- Author
-
Hedlin, Pontus
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,CHARITABLE uses, trusts, & foundations ,ORGANIZATIONAL transparency ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Abstract: Over the past decade, a host of donor organizations implemented transparency systems to make international development aid more transparent to the public. These initiatives have met with little public interest, but their proliferation and development show no sign of diminishing. This article shows how internal importance to the political system, fueled by formal rankings and the exhibition of transparency systems as a flagship initiative, can replace relevance to the public as a driving force for sustainable development. The article concludes by discussing the possibility of a future development where transparency systems finally do connect with user groups, such as citizens of both donor and recipient countries, and gain a relevance even beyond original intentions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Overcoming the limits of institutional reform in Uganda.
- Author
-
Andrews, Matt
- Subjects
PUBLIC sector ,REFORMS ,ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC institutions ,UGANDAN politics & government - Abstract
Abstract: Uganda has been a public sector reform leader in Africa, producing many best practice laws and structures. Many reforms are limited to such gains, however, producing new forms that function poorly (laws are often not implemented and processes poorly executed). This article suggests adjustments to the reform agenda that address these limitations and close gaps between what Uganda's system looks like and how it functions. Adjustments involve adopting problem driven iterative adaptation (PDIA), which requires Ugandans to work together actively on their reforms, coming to terms with limits and engaging iteratively to find and fit ways to overcome these limits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. An evaluation of donor agencies’ policies on participatory development: The case of Ghana.
- Author
-
Danquah, Joseph Kwadwo, Analoui, Farhad, and Koomson, Yvonne Ekua Deiba
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development projects ,ECONOMIC development ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
Abstract: This article critically evaluates guidelines concerning participatory development by the World Bank and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). It focuses on the different conceptual frameworks adopted in order to examine the different ways of incorporating participation in their development agenda. A literature‐based method was adopted and the analysis included evaluation of five documented experiences, including the Ghana Secondary Education Improvement Project and Ghana Water Sanitation and Hygiene Project from both the World Bank and USAID. Baum project cycle stages have been taken as activities for project participation. The findings show the need for better planning, ensuring sustainability and involving beneficiaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Exporting stimulus and “shared prosperity”: Reinventing foreign aid for a retroliberal era.
- Author
-
Mawdsley, Emma, Murray, Warwick E., Overton, John, Scheyvens, Regina, and Banks, Glenn
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,PRIVATE sector ,ECONOMIC development ,GEOPOLITICS - Abstract
Abstract: The global aid world has changed, partly in response to the reconfigurations of geopolitical power and to the global financial crisis (GFC). Paradoxically, in the face of recession in most northern economies, collectively foreign aid contributions have not fallen. However there has been a qualitative shift in its narrative and nature. This new regime—which we term retroliberalism—projects the concept of “shared prosperity,” but constitutes a return to explicit self‐interest designed to bolster private sector trade and investment. Drawing evidence from New Zealand and the United Kingdom, we argue that aid programmes are increasingly functioning as “exported stimulus” packages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Are service‐delivery NGOs building state capacity in the Global South? Experiences from HIV/AIDS programmes in rural Uganda.
- Author
-
Bukenya, Badru
- Subjects
NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,NATION building ,ECONOMIC development ,HIV prevention - Abstract
Abstract: Service‐delivery NGOs are often attacked for abandoning the pursuit of ‘alternative development’ in favour of ‘technocratic’ forms of development. Yet some commentators argue that these organizations can have progressive impacts on political forms and processes. We investigate this debate through the lens of state building. Research into The AIDS Support Organisation's (TASO) work with the Ugandan government reveals that its state capacity building effects were both uneven and temporary. Although TASO played important roles in strengthening the bureaucratic ability of targeted hospitals to deliver HIV/AIDS services and increased the state's embeddedness in society in the targeted districts, it was less successful in expanding the infrastructural reach of the state in rural Uganda. We conclude that NGOs need longer time‐frames to achieve state building goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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