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This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship
Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected
open access locations. Governments play a major role in the
development process, and constantly introduce reforms and policies
to achieve developmental objectives. Many of these interventions
have limited impact, however; schools get built but children don't
learn, IT systems are introduced but not used, plans are written
but not implemented. These achievement deficiencies reveal gaps in
capabilities, and weaknesses in the process of building state
capability. This book addresses these weaknesses and gaps. It
starts by providing evidence of the capability shortfalls that
currently exist in many countries, showing that many governments
lack basic capacities even after decades of reforms and capacity
building efforts. The book then analyses this evidence, identifying
capability traps that hold many governments back - particularly
related to isomorphic mimicry (where governments copy best practice
solutions from other countries that make them look more capable
even if they are not more capable) and premature load bearing
(where governments adopt new mechanisms that they cannot actually
make work, given weak extant capacities). The book then describes a
process that governments can use to escape these capability traps.
Called PDIA (problem driven iterative adaptation), this process
empowers people working in governments to find and fit solutions to
the problems they face. The discussion about this process is
structured in a practical manner so that readers can actually apply
tools and ideas to the capability challenges they face in their own
contexts. These applications will help readers devise policies and
reforms that have more impact than those of the past.
Governments play a major role in the development process, and
constantly introduce reforms and policies to achieve developmental
objectives. Many of these interventions have limited impact,
however; schools get built but children don't learn, IT systems are
introduced but not used, plans are written but not implemented.
These achievement deficiencies reveal gaps in capabilities, and
weaknesses in the process of building state capability. This book
addresses these weaknesses and gaps. It starts by providing
evidence of the capability shortfalls that currently exist in many
countries, showing that many governments lack basic capacities even
after decades of reforms and capacity building efforts. The book
then analyses this evidence, identifying capability traps that hold
many governments back - particularly related to isomorphic mimicry
(where governments copy best practice solutions from other
countries that make them look more capable even if they are not
more capable) and premature load bearing (where governments adopt
new mechanisms that they cannot actually make work, given weak
extant capacities). The book then describes a process that
governments can use to escape these capability traps. Called PDIA
(problem driven iterative adaptation), this process empowers people
working in governments to find and fit solutions to the problems
they face. The discussion about this process is structured in a
practical manner so that readers can actually apply tools and ideas
to the capability challenges they face in their own contexts. These
applications will help readers devise policies and reforms that
have more impact than those of the past.
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford
Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and
selected open access locations. When are developing countries able
to initiate periods of rapid growth and why have so few of these
countries been able to sustain growth over decades? Deals and
Development: The Political Dynamics of Growth Episodes seeks to
answer these questions and many more through a novel conceptual
framework built from a political economy of business-government
relations. Economic growth for most developing countries is not a
linear process. Growth instead proceeds in booms and busts, yet
most frameworks for thinking about economic growth are built on the
faulty assumption that a country's economic performance is largely
stable. Deals and Development explains how growth episodes emerge
and when growth, once ignited, is maintained for a sustained
period. It applies its new framework to examine the growth of
countries across a range of institutional and political contexts in
Africa and Asia, using the examples of Bangladesh, Cambodia, India,
Malaysia, Thailand, Ghana, Liberia, Malawi, Rwanda and Uganda.
Through these country analyses it demonstrates the explanatory
power of its framework and the importance of feedback cycles in
which economic trends interact with political behaviour to either
sustain or terminate a growth episode. Offering a lens through
which to analyse complex scenarios and unwieldy amounts of
information, this book provides actionable levers of intervention
to bring around reform and improve a country's chance at achieving
transformative economic growth.
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