Title: SISAF 444 Africa Studies Seminar
1SISAF 444 Africa Studies Seminar
Winter 2007
- Economic Policy
- and
- Policy Reform
2The Postwar World
- Decolonization and The Rise of the Third World
- The spread of economic planning
- Aid for investment
Import-substitution
- Key role of physical capital Infant industries
- Government ownership Trade barriers
- Development plans Strategic sectors
- Mobilization of savings
Anti-agricultural bias
3Three Development Paradigms
- Statism (a big government)
- State-led development, industrialization,
import-substitution
- Neo-liberalism (a small government)
- Washington consensus, stabilization,
liberalization, structural adjustment,
conditionality
- State-building (the right government)
- Relationships between state, market and
non-state/non-market institutions (e.g. civil
society),
- Emphasis on governance, incentives and wider
economic/political participation
4Three Development Paradigms
- Statism (a big government)
- State-led development, industrialization,
import-substitution
- Neo-liberalism (a small government)
- Washington consensus, stabilization,
liberalization, structural adjustment,
conditionality
- State-building (the right government)
- Relationships between state, market and
non-state/non-market institutions (e.g. civil
society),
- Emphasis on governance, incentives and wider
economic/political participation
Development policies after World War II in newly
independent countries and in Latin America
5Three Development Paradigms
- Statism (a big government)
- State-led development, industrialization,
import-substitution
- Neo-liberalism (a small government)
- Washington consensus, stabilization,
liberalization, structural adjustment,
conditionality
- State-building (the right government)
- Relationships between state, market and
non-state/non-market institutions (e.g. civil
society),
- Emphasis on governance, incentives and wider
economic/political participation
6Personalities and Policies
7Tanzania
- President
- Julius Nyerere,
- mwalimu
8Tanzania
- African Socialism
- "Ujamaa," then, or "familyhood," describes our
socialism. It is opposed to capitalism, which
seeks to build a happy society on the basis of
the exploitation of man by man and it is equally
opposed to doctrinaire socialism which seeks to
build its happy society on a philosophy of
inevitable conflict between man and man. - Julius Nyerere
9Tanzania
- Villagization
- Africanization
- Nationalization
10Tanzania
- One-partyism
- Development planning
- Parastatals
- Marketing boards
11Kenya
- President
- Jomo Kenyatta,
- mzee
- taa ya Kenya
12Kenya
- Land redistribution
- democratic African socialism
- harambee (local self-help)
13Kenya
- Economy honeycombed with government controls
- less oppressive agricultural policy
- Patronage politics ethnic politics
14Ghana
- President
- Kwame Nkrumah,
- osagyefo
- (Redeemer)
15Ghana
- Development planning
- industrialization, electrification
- State-owned industries
- Penalizing cocoa producers
16Ghana
- Anti-imperialism
- Pan-africanism
- Nkrumahism
17Côte dIvoire
- President
- Félix Houphouët-Boigny,
- sage of Africa
18Côte dIvoire
- Marie-Thérèse
- Houphouët-Boigny
- The African Orchid
- No caged bird, but a delicious, capricious
worldling, the Ivory Coast's sensuous,
luxury-loving Marie-Thérèse Houphouet-Boigny, 31,
delights Parisians even more than Jacqueline
Kennedy or the Empress Farah Thérèse loves
orchids and sables, pilots a fast Lancia - (Time Magazine, June 8th, 1962)
19Côte dIvoire
- Close links with France (CFA)
- Strong French commercial and settler presence
- More liberal economic policies, incl. cocoa
production and export
20Côte dIvoire
- Patronage politics
- One-party rule (PDCI)
- Over-borrowing, over-spending
21Basilique de Notre Dame de la Paix
Yamoussoukro, Côte dIvoire
22Basilique de Notre-Dame de la Paix
Yamoussoukro, Côte dIvoire
23Guinea
- President
- Ahmed Sékou Touré
- Guide supreme
- de la Révolution
- Great Son of Africa
- The Terror of International
- Imperialism, Colonialism
- and Neo-Colonialism
- Doctor of Revolutionary Sciences
24Guinea
- De-linking from France
- Socialist cultural revolution
- Eradication of individualism
- Police state, human rights violations
25Guinea
- Parastatals
- Statism
- Nationalization
- Ending of all private trade and private economic
activity
26Senegal
- President
- Leopold Senghor,
- le vieux
27Senegal
- Pro-French policies (French investment, trading)
- Large number of parastatals, protected by
tariffs
- Patron-client politics
28Malawi
- President
- Hastings Kamuzu Banda,
- Everything is my business
- Anything I say is law. Literally law
- The Great Lion
29Malawi
- The entry of 'hippies' and men with long hair
and flared trousers is forbidden
- (1980s Malawi visa requirements)
30 - Addendum
- Crackpots,
- killers,
- kleptocrats
31Equatorial Guinea
- President
- Francisco Macias Nguema,
- Unique Miracle
- Grand Master of Science,
- Education, and Culture
32Equatorial Guinea
- Pol Pot of Africa
- "He can decide to kill without anyone calling him
to account and without going to hell because it
is God himself, with whom he is in permanent
contact, and who gives him this strength" (State
Radio Announcement)
33Chad
- President
- Francois Tombalbaye
- Chaditude
34Uganda
- President Idi Amin,
- His Excellency President for Life, Field Marshal
Al Hadji Doctor Idi Amin, VC, DSO, MC,
- Lord of All the Beasts of the Earth and Fishes of
the Sea
- Conqueror of the British Empire in Africa in
General and Uganda in Particular
- King of Scotland
35Central African Republic
- President
- Jean-Bédel Bokassa,
- by the will of the people,
- Emperor of Central Africa
36Zaire
- President
- Joseph Mobutu
- The all-powerful warrior who,
- because of his endurance
- and inflexible will to win,
- will go from conquest
- to conquest,
- leaving fire in his wake"
37Liberia
- President
- Charles Taylor
- He killed my ma,
- he killed my pa,
- but I will vote for him
38Bates Prosperity and Violence
- Postwar period
- International system shapes the way developing
countries are ruled
- International borders are guaranteed
- Cold War and U.N system weaken the security
imperative
39Bates Prosperity and Violence
- Postwar period
- International system shapes the way developing
countries are ruled
- Foreign sources of finance (aid)
- Countries did not have to develop their own
domestic economies
- Limited bargaining power for citizens
- Bad governments, predatory states
- Patronage and privilege
40Bates Prosperity and Violence
Foreign aid weakens the revenue imperative
- Postwar period
- International system shapes the way developing
countries are ruled
- Foreign sources of finance (aid)
- Countries did not have to develop their own
domestic economies
- Limited bargaining power for citizens
- Bad governments, predatory states
- Patronage and privilege
41Bates Prosperity and Violence
- Highly politicized economies
- Widespread corruption
- Large informal sectors
- Lack of impersonal rule, big man
- Governments provide private goods for supporters,
not public goods for everyone
- Postwar period
- international system shapes the way developing
countries are ruled
- Foreign sources of finance (aid)
- Countries did not have to develop their domestic
economies
- Limited bargaining power for citizens
- Bad governments, predatory states
- Patronage and privilege
42Bates Prosperity and Violence
- Patron-client relations
- (neo-patrimonialism)
- Governments create rents
- Individuals and groups seek rents
- Co-opting of civil society
- Gatekeeper state
- Importance of ethnicity
- Postwar period
- international system shapes the way developing
countries are ruled
- Foreign sources of finance (aid)
- Countries did not have to develop their domestic
economies
- Limited bargaining power for citizens
- Bad governments, predatory states
- Patronage and privilege
43Bates Prosperity and Violence
- Postwar period
- international system shapes the way developing
countries are ruled
- Foreign sources of finance (aid)
- Countries did not have to develop their domestic
economies
- Limited bargaining power for citizens
- Bad governments, predatory states
- Patronage and privilege
permanent crisis after the mid-to-late 1970s
44Three Development Paradigms
- Statism (a big government)
- State-led development, industrialization,
import-substitution
- Neo-liberalism (a small government)
- Washington consensus, stabilization,
liberalization, structural adjustment,
conditionality
- State-building (the right government)
- Relationships between state, market and
non-state/non-market institutions (e.g. civil
society),
- Emphasis on governance, incentives and wider
economic/political participation
45Three Development Paradigms
- Statism (a big government)
- State-led development, industrialization,
import-substitution
- Neo-liberalism (a small government)
- Washington consensus, stabilization,
liberalization, structural adjustment,
conditionality
- State-building (the right government)
- Relationships between state, market and
non-state/non-market institutions (e.g. civil
society),
- Emphasis on governance, incentives and wider
economic/political participation
Development policies after World War II in newly
independent countries and in Latin America
46The Spread of Industrialization
1
47The Spread of Industrialization
Late 18th/early 19th C.
1
2
Mid-Late 19th C.
48The Spread of Industrialization
Early-Mid 20th C.
3
4
Mid-Late 19th C.
5
Mid-Late 20th C.
49The Spread of Industrialization
Early-Mid 20th C.
3
4
5
Mid-Late 20th C.
Late 19th/early 20th C.
export-oriented
protected/subsidized
50Three Development Paradigms
- Statism (a big government)
- State-led development, industrialization,
import-substitution, involving
- overvalued exchange rates
- large government budgets
- multiple price controls
- controls on banking and interest rates
- trade barriers/controls on exports and imports
(tariffs, quotas)
- financing through aid and loans
51Ghana and Malaysia
- Both independent in 1957
- reversal of fortune
GDP per capita in 2005 US 2,400
GDP per capita in 2005 US 10,400
52Ghana and Malaysia
- Both independent in 1957
- reversal of fortune
GDP per capita in 2005 US 2,400
GDP per capita in 2005 US 10,400
53The Crisis
- Inefficient industrialization policies
- Import substitution in small markets
- Lack of external or internal competition
- Over-taxation of agriculture (marketing boards,
overvalued exchange rates)
- High rates of population growth
54The Crisis
- Large fiscal imbalances
- Unsustainable indebtedness
- Large trade deficits
- Overvalued currencies
- Inflation
- Shortages of foreign exchange,
- large black market premiums
- Widespread corruption and rent-seeking
551980s The Lost Decade
- Economic reform programs
- IMF (stabilization)
- World Bank (structural adjustment)
56Three Development Paradigms
- Statism (a big government)
- State-led development, industrialization,
import-substitution
- Neo-liberalism (a small government)
- Washington consensus, stabilization,
liberalization, structural adjustment,
conditionality
- State-building (the right government)
- Relationships between state, market and
non-state/non-market institutions (e.g. civil
society),
- Emphasis on governance, incentives and wider
economic/political participation
57Three Development Paradigms
- Statism (a big government)
- State-led development, industrialization,
import-substitution
- Neo-liberalism (a small government)
- Washington consensus, stabilization,
liberalization, structural adjustment,
conditionality
- State-building (the right government)
- Relationships between state, market and
non-state/non-market institutions (e.g. civil
society),
- Emphasis on governance, incentives and wider
economic/political participation
Development policies after the 1982 debt crisis
and the end of the Cold War
58The Washington Consensus
- Fiscal discipline, budgetary balance
- A redirection of public expenditure priorities
toward fields offering both high economic returns
and the potential to improve income distribution,
such as primary health care, primary education,
and infrastructure - Tax reform (to lower marginal rates and broaden
the tax base)
- Interest rate liberalization and positive real
interest rates
- A competitive exchange rate
- Trade liberalization, reduction of trade
distortions
- Liberalization of inflows of foreign direct
investment
- Privatization
- Deregulation (ending price controls and controls
on entry/exit)
- Secure property rights
Williamson 1990
59Has economic reform worked?
- Twin aims of structural adjustment
- Manage Africas economic crisis
- Begin fundamental economic reforms
60Has economic reform worked?
- Puzzle
- The economic crisis in Africa has persisted
through two decades of economic reform
(structural adjustment) and conditional lending
- Too little adjustment, too little growth, too
little scrutiny of results
- (William Easterly, 2003)
- Ayodele et al. quote on p. 2
61Has economic reform worked?
- African governments manage reform programs with
their own interests and the interests of their
supporters in mind
- African governments have protected government
consumption (sovereignty expenditures)
62Has economic reform worked?
- African governments manage reform programs with
their own interests and the interests of their
supporters in mind
- African governments have protected government
consumption (sovereignty expenditures)
Partial reform syndrome
63Has economic reform worked?
- African governments play games with donors
- Donors are easily fooled, their threats are not
credible
- Donors dont even care that they are easily
fooled?
- Aid helps to stave off political reform
64Has economic reform worked?
- Cynics might say that Uganda can hold the world
to ransom because the World Bank, The IMF and
other foreign donors cannot afford to let their
star pupil go under - (The Economist, quoted in Ayodele et al.)
65Foreign Aid
- Aid has not worked, even in good policy
environments
- Aid conditionality has not worked
- Aid has not induced or rewarded policy reform
- Aid decreases democracy, worsens government (aid
curse)
Kanbur 2000, Easterly 2006
66Why does aid fail so often?
- World Bank
- Donor countries spend 1 billion a year to lift
raise 284,000 people a year out of extreme
poverty ( 1 per day, PPP)
- 3,500 per year to raise a poor persons
income above 365 per year
67Why does aid fail so often?
- World Bank administration
- 81 million (1959/60)
- 1.5 billion (1993/94)
- 657 employees (1959/60)
- 7,106 employees (1993/94)
68Example Ethiopia wants aid (PRSP)
- Applies for World Banks Poverty Reduction
Support Credits (PRSC)
- Applies for IMF Poverty Reduction and Growth
Facility (PRGF)
- Completes Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP)
in consultation with NGOs, civil society, other
donors and creditors (at least two years to
complete) - Prepares PRSP in accordance with 14-point
Comprehensive Development Framework (CDF) of the
World Bank
- World Bank assesses PRSC and prepares Country
Assistance Strategy (CAS),
- World Bank sends pre-appraisal mission to
Ethiopia, reports
- World Bank sends appraisal mission to Ethiopia,
reports
- World Bank Board negotiates approval in
accordance with guidelines
- To avoid new loan going to service old loan,
Ethiopia applies to Enhanced Heavily Indebted
Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC)
- Creditors and government complete a Debt
Sustainability Analysis (DSA)
- HIPC, PRSC, PRGF require numerous reform
conditions
- Participation of the poor
- Monitoring of poverty-reducing expenditures
through annual Public Expenditure Reviews (PERs)
- Preparation of fiscal deficit and revenue
mobilization targets
- Implementation of Financial Information
Management System (FIMS) in line with 12
International Standards and Codes required by IMF
and World Bank - Implementation in accordance with the WTOs
Integrated Framework for Trade-Related Technical
Assistance to Least Developed Countries
- Prioritization of needs in a Multi-Year
Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF), using
guidance from the Poverty Reduction Strategy
Paper Sourcebook (1,000 pages) - Government asked to monitor progress in terms of
of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), including
hunger, poverty, maternal and infant mortality,
primary education, clean water contraceptive use,
AIDS, gender equality, environment and quality of
governance - Other institutions request opportunity to comment
on PRSP UNDP, WFP, ADB. UNCTAD, FAO, WTO, WHO,
ILO, UNICEF, UNHCR, Development Assistance Group
with representatives of national aid agencies
from
69Example Ethiopia wants aid
- An Ethiopian farmer has around 74 cents a day in
PPP-adjusted US dollars
- At the end of ten years her income will have
increased by a grand total of eight cents a day,
to 82 cents a day, if
- the application and approval and implementation
of the aid package goes smoothly
- the money goes where it is supposed to go
70Easterly, Utopian Nightmare
-
- Utopian
- Possessing or regarded as having impossibly or
extravagantly ideal conditions in respect of
politics, customs, social organization, etc.
Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed.
71Easterly, Utopian Nightmare
- Key challenges in aid delivery
- (or any other large top-down project)
- Incentives
- Information (Feedback)
- Accountability
72Has economic reform worked?
- Is economic reform possible without political
reform?
- An economic crisis is not automatically a
political crisis
- Can good economics be good politics?