The politics of governing oil effectively: A comparative study of two new oil-rich states in Africa
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Abstract
The challenges facing developing countries with new-found natural resource wealth
are generally understood in terms of whether they have the institutions of ‘good
governance’ required to avoid the resource curse. New insights from a political
settlements perspective show how deeper forms of politics and power relations play
a more significant role than such institutions, and help explain some counter-intuitive
findings regarding how ‘semi-authoritarian’ Uganda seems to be governing oil
somewhat more in line with its national interest as compared to ‘democratic’ Ghana.
We find that bureaucratic ‘pockets of effectiveness’ play a critical role, with outcomes
shaped by the nature of their embedded autonomy vis-à-vis different kinds of ruling
coalition. Efforts to promote ‘best-practice’ governance reforms in such contexts
might be misplaced, and could be replaced with a stronger focus on building specific
forms of state capacity and a greater acceptance that ‘developmental collusion’
between political and bureaucratic actors may offer more appropriate or ‘best-fit’
solutions.