The politics of policy failure in Ghana: The case of oil palm
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World Development Perspectives
Abstract
The paper argues that political economy factors have hindered the development of the oil palm value chain in
Ghana, which has consistently underperformed despite significant policy support and the sector’s strategic
importance to the national economy. These factors include political instability between the mid-1960s and early
1980s, as well as the emergence of a competitive clientelist political settlement since the country’s return to
constitutional rule. Drawing on key informant interviews and documentary sources, the paper demonstrates that
policies over the past two decades have failed to address the peculiar nature of the value chain, which is
bifurcated into a smallholder/artisanal sub-sector and an estate/industrial processing sub-sector. Since the
1990s, one aspect of policy failure in the sector has been the ‘paradox of good intentions’ that arises from the
simultaneous pursuit of economic transformation and inclusive development in a political context described by
some scholars as ’strong democracy, weak state’. The logic of electoral competition shortens politicians’ time
horizons, predisposing them to prioritise highly visible distributive policies (like input subsidies) over structural
reforms (like land tenure issues or solving market frictions). Consequently, despite almost two centuries of
continuous policy support, the sector’s productivity remains at the same level it would have been if it had been
left to operate without any state assistance.
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Research Article