Solving the Mystery of African Governance

The dominant view of good governance as a pre-condition for economic success is theoretically compelling but empirically difficult to establish. Historical analyses tend to indicate a very strong correlation between institutional development and economic growth. Today’s high-income and good-governance countries generally had bad-governance environments at low levels of income. Moreover, some of today’s most successful economies still exhibit sub-optimal governance indicators. By focusing on the search for the determinants of some global governance standards that often reflect particular political, ideological and philosophical conceptions of power, the traditional literature on governance has so far failed to offer a set of actionable policies that poor countries could implement to foster inclusive growth in a pragmatic and incentives-compatible way. This article acknowledges that governance problems are indeed major impediments to economic growth. But contrary to conventional wisdom, it argues that the well-known governance problems in African countries are mainly the reflection of their low level of development, and the results of failed state interventions and distortions originating from erroneous economic development strategies. Instead of posing ‘good’ governance as the main prescription and a prerequisite for sustained growth, development economists should design policy frameworks that offer the maximum likelihood of success because they are consistent with comparative advantage while providing minimum opportunities for rent-seeking and state capture.

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Main Authors: Lin, Justin Yifu, Monga, Célestin
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Taylor and Francis 2012-11-29
Subjects:governance, theories of corruption, prebendal politics, New Structural Economics,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13381
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spelling dig-okr-10986133812021-04-23T14:03:08Z Solving the Mystery of African Governance Lin, Justin Yifu Monga, Célestin governance theories of corruption prebendal politics New Structural Economics The dominant view of good governance as a pre-condition for economic success is theoretically compelling but empirically difficult to establish. Historical analyses tend to indicate a very strong correlation between institutional development and economic growth. Today’s high-income and good-governance countries generally had bad-governance environments at low levels of income. Moreover, some of today’s most successful economies still exhibit sub-optimal governance indicators. By focusing on the search for the determinants of some global governance standards that often reflect particular political, ideological and philosophical conceptions of power, the traditional literature on governance has so far failed to offer a set of actionable policies that poor countries could implement to foster inclusive growth in a pragmatic and incentives-compatible way. This article acknowledges that governance problems are indeed major impediments to economic growth. But contrary to conventional wisdom, it argues that the well-known governance problems in African countries are mainly the reflection of their low level of development, and the results of failed state interventions and distortions originating from erroneous economic development strategies. Instead of posing ‘good’ governance as the main prescription and a prerequisite for sustained growth, development economists should design policy frameworks that offer the maximum likelihood of success because they are consistent with comparative advantage while providing minimum opportunities for rent-seeking and state capture. 2013-05-13T14:13:37Z 2013-05-13T14:13:37Z 2012-11-29 Journal Article New Political Economy 1356-3467 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13381 en_US New Political Economy;17(5) CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ World Bank Taylor and Francis Publications & Research :: Journal Article Publications & Research Africa
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic governance
theories of corruption
prebendal politics
New Structural Economics
governance
theories of corruption
prebendal politics
New Structural Economics
spellingShingle governance
theories of corruption
prebendal politics
New Structural Economics
governance
theories of corruption
prebendal politics
New Structural Economics
Lin, Justin Yifu
Monga, Célestin
Solving the Mystery of African Governance
description The dominant view of good governance as a pre-condition for economic success is theoretically compelling but empirically difficult to establish. Historical analyses tend to indicate a very strong correlation between institutional development and economic growth. Today’s high-income and good-governance countries generally had bad-governance environments at low levels of income. Moreover, some of today’s most successful economies still exhibit sub-optimal governance indicators. By focusing on the search for the determinants of some global governance standards that often reflect particular political, ideological and philosophical conceptions of power, the traditional literature on governance has so far failed to offer a set of actionable policies that poor countries could implement to foster inclusive growth in a pragmatic and incentives-compatible way. This article acknowledges that governance problems are indeed major impediments to economic growth. But contrary to conventional wisdom, it argues that the well-known governance problems in African countries are mainly the reflection of their low level of development, and the results of failed state interventions and distortions originating from erroneous economic development strategies. Instead of posing ‘good’ governance as the main prescription and a prerequisite for sustained growth, development economists should design policy frameworks that offer the maximum likelihood of success because they are consistent with comparative advantage while providing minimum opportunities for rent-seeking and state capture.
format Journal Article
topic_facet governance
theories of corruption
prebendal politics
New Structural Economics
author Lin, Justin Yifu
Monga, Célestin
author_facet Lin, Justin Yifu
Monga, Célestin
author_sort Lin, Justin Yifu
title Solving the Mystery of African Governance
title_short Solving the Mystery of African Governance
title_full Solving the Mystery of African Governance
title_fullStr Solving the Mystery of African Governance
title_full_unstemmed Solving the Mystery of African Governance
title_sort solving the mystery of african governance
publisher Taylor and Francis
publishDate 2012-11-29
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13381
work_keys_str_mv AT linjustinyifu solvingthemysteryofafricangovernance
AT mongacelestin solvingthemysteryofafricangovernance
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