scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Foreign Aid, Institutions, and Governance in Sub‐Saharan Africa*

Deborah Bräutigam, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2004 - 
- Vol. 52, Iss: 2, pp 255-285
TLDR
In this paper, the authors explore the institutional impact of these high levels of aid and the way that large amounts of aid are delivered in many of the countries with poor governance records.
Abstract
Introduction More than a decade ago, the World Bank argued that “underlying the litany of Africa’s development problems is a crisis of governance.” Poor quality institutions, weak rule of law, an absence of accountability, tight controls over information, and high levels of corruption still characterize many African states today. Aid levels have been reduced in many parts of Africa during the past decade. Yet in many of the countries with poor governance records, aid continues to contribute a very high percentage of government budgets. This article explores the institutional impact of these high levels of aid and the way that large amounts of aid are delivered. There are many reasons why governance is poor in much of sub-Saharan Africa. Colonialism did little to develop strong, indigenously rooted institutions that could tackle the development demands of modern states. Economic crisis and unsustainable debt, civil wars, and political instability have all taken their toll over the past 2 decades and more. It is difficult to separate the impact of these problems from the possible impact of foreign aid, which is often high in countries that suffer from precisely these problems. Theory provides conflicting guidance here. On the one hand, aid can release governments from binding revenue constraints, enabling them to strengthen domestic institutions and pay higher salaries to civil servants. Aid can provide training and technical assistance to build legal systems and accounting offices. In many countries, aid personnel (sometimes expatriate) manage important government programs, and the infusion of resources and technical assistance can give an important boost to the efficiency and effectiveness of governance, if only in a partial sense. Yet despite these likely benefits, it is also possible that, continued over

read more

Citations
More filters
Posted Content

Natural Resources: Curse or Blessing?

TL;DR: This paper surveys a variety of hypotheses and supporting evidence for why some countries benefit and others lose from the presence of natural resources and offers some welfare-based fiscal rules for harnessing resource windfalls in developed and developing economies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Natural Resources: Curse or Blessing?

TL;DR: In this article, a variety of hypotheses and supporting evidence for why some countries benefit and others lose from the presence of natural resources are surveyed and some welfare-based fiscal rules for harnessing resource windfalls in developed and developing economies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Curse of Aid

TL;DR: This paper found that if the foreign aid over Gross Domestic Product (GDP) that a country receives over a period of five years reaches the 75th percentile in the sample, then a 10-point index of democracy is reduced between 0.5 and almost one point, a large effect.
Posted ContentDOI

What Undermines Aid's Impact on Growth?

TL;DR: This article examined the effect of aid on the long-term growth of poor countries and found that aid inflows have systematic adverse effects on a country's competitiveness, as reflected in a decline in the share of labor intensive and tradable industries in the manufacturing sector.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aid, Dutch disease, and manufacturing growth

TL;DR: This article examined the effects of aid on the growth of manufacturing, using a methodology that exploits the variation within countries and across manufacturing sectors, and corrects for possible reverse causality, finding that aid inflows have systematic adverse effects on a country's competitiveness, as reflected in the lower relative growth rate of exportable industries.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Institutions and economic performance: cross‐country tests using alternative institutional measures

TL;DR: The authors compared more direct measures of the institutional environment with both the instability proxies used by Barro (1991) and the Gastil indices, by comparing their effects both on growth and private investment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The causes of corruption: a cross-national study

TL;DR: The authors analyzed several indexes of perceived corruption compiled from business risk surveys for the 1980s and 1990s and found that countries with Protestant traditions, histories of British rule, more developed economies, and (probably) higher imports were less corrupt.
Book ChapterDOI

Bringing the State Back In: Bringing the State Back In: Strategies of Analysis in Current Research

Theda Skocpol
TL;DR: A sudden upsurge of interest in the state as an actor or an institution has been highlighted in an extraordinary outpouring of studies by scholars of diverse theoretical proclivities from all of the major disciplines.
Book ChapterDOI

Foreign Assistance and Economic Development

TL;DR: For most underdeveloped countries, foreign assistance is already a critical source of development finance and one of the main hopes for accelerated growth in the future as discussed by the authors, and since private investment has stagnated during this period, public grants and loans now provide over $6 billion of the total of about $9 billion transferred.
Posted Content

Politics and the Effectiveness of Foreign Aid

TL;DR: This paper analyzed the effectiveness of foreign aid programs to gain insights into political regimes in aid recipient countries and found that the impact of aid does not vary according to whether recipient governments are liberal democracies or highly repressive.
Related Papers (5)