I wrote in my dissertation that “the foreign aid system exists in a constant state of crisis of self-examination”. A book reviewer really hated that sentence, considering it too glib and pretentious. And yet, look around: Angus Deaton’s new book criticizes aid for its effectiveness, a new book has just exposed the failures and contradictions of Jeffrey Sachs’s “Millennium Villages” project, and William Easterly (who seems quite happy with the exposé of his arch-nemesis) will soon release a new book in the “aid does not work” series that has made him famous, with the convivial title “The Tyranny of Experts”. So after 60 years of development assistance it is 2013 and apparently aid has failed, thus joining an illustrious group of transformational ideas that “failed” after decades of setbacks.
Category: Development
Here’s the abstract for my ESID Working Paper (25, October 2013) with Badru Bukenya, which was just released on the ESID website under the title “Building State Capacity for Inclusive Development: The Politics of Public Sector Reform”:
A capable state is essential for inclusive development, and throughout the developing world governments and international development agencies are seeking to build it through a multifaceted agenda of Public Sector Reform (PSR). This paper presents an analytical review of the PSR agenda, emphasizing the political contestation inherent to the development of state capacity, and argues for a more nuanced and politically-informed research agenda. We begin by examining the various definitions of state capacity that are commonly employed by researchers, and settle on bureaucratic capacity as the transversal precondition for policy implementation. State capacity so understood has two components, effectiveness and accountability, and two domains, internal and external. Their intersection generates four broad dimensions of reform: organizational rationality, administrative restraint, social embeddedness and political autonomy; and each dimension in turn is likely to exhibit a different pattern of political contestation due to the parallel incentives for patrimonialism, corruption, oligarchy, and capture.
We use this analytical framework to categorise and examine the major components of the PSR agenda, assessing their rates of success or failure according to the available evidence: we find that the relative failure of the PSR agenda so far is due to its reliance on flawed assumptions about the administrative politics of state capacity. We then evaluate whether new models that try to bypass central bureaucracies are likely to encounter greater success; specifically, we review the Africa Governance Initiative, the Open Government Partnership, and the ‘hybrid models’ approach of the Africa Power and Politics Programme, and argue that all of them will be forced to confront the same politics of state capacity in the end. We close the paper by outlining a set of tentative guidelines for future research at ESID and elsewhere, suggesting a greater focus on the role of elites, informal institutions, the legislature as a non-state component of state capacity, the distinction between transversal and sectoral approaches, and finally the modalities and objectives of external assistance.
Próxima parada: Bangladesh
Ya tengo billetes para el tercer país que vamos a estudiar como parte de nuestro proyecto sobre análisis de economía política en la ayuda al desarrollo: Bangladesh. A continuación: Todo lo que siempre quiso saber sobre un país que nunca conoció.
En España solemos tener una visión más bien limitada de lo que es la cooperación al desarrollo: por lo general consideramos a la cooperación una extensión del acto solidario, del dar a los que más lo necesitan, en definitivas cuentas de la caridad. Pero las vacunas, los libros de colegio, y los niños apadrinados son sólo una parte de la historia.
Uganda: Llegada
Ah, aerolínea Emirates: ¿por qué hemos tardado tanto en conocernos? Aviones modernos, pantallas de entretenimiento en cada asiento (incluyendo Un día en las carreras, de los Hermanos Marx, el juego backgamon, o el resumen del Rally Dakar 2013), un bonito menú bilingüe inglés-árabe, comida bastante mejor que la de una aerolínea normal, información en pantalla sobre las conexiones de vuelo en Dubai, puntualidad, y la mezcla más ridículamente cosmopolita de personal de vuelo (en el trayecto Dubai – Entebbe entre todos hablaban inglés, español, francés, alemán, portugués, árabe, serbio, tagalo…).
Trabajo de campo en Uganda
La semana que viene estaré en Uganda haciendo investigación de campo para el proyecto en el que trabajo en ESID. Es mi segunda visita a Uganda, y el tercer país pequeño y pobre al que voy por trabajo en los últimos dos meses. Pero en esta ocasión he pensado aprovechar el blog para describir un poco en qué consiste este tipo de viaje y cómo se plantea uno irse a lugares fuera de lo común. Spoiler: no es tan difícil como parece.