Competitive clientelism and the political economy of mining in Ghana
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Abstract
This paper offers a political economy explanation to the question of why over 100
years of mineral resource extraction in Ghana has failed to translate into broadbased
development. It does so through the lens of political settlements, which draws
attention to how relations of power and ideas shape elite commitment to allocating
mineral resources towards long-term development goals. The analysis draws
attention to how clientelist political pressures engendered by Ghana’s highly
competitive electoral system have historically underpinned the diversion of mineral
revenues towards shorter-term goals of maintaining the stability of ruling coalitions. In
particular, all ruling coalitions have allocated significant shares of mineral rents to
chiefs not necessarily for the socio-economic development of their communities, but
mainly because political elites want to avoid provoking resistance from a group in
society that brokers land and votes in rural areas. These findings challenge recent
suggestions concerning the centrality of inclusive political settlements for the
effective management of mineral rents. As the analyses reveal, broad-based elite
inclusion can also carry the danger of undermining the effective management of rents
for long-term development if mineral rents are deployed with the aim of ’buying-off‘
elites who can potentially undermine the stability of ruling coalitions. Under such
circumstances, inclusive political settlements may at best result in unproductive
peace, as substantial mineral resources are shared for consumption rather than
development.