How does the nature of African governments limit development? Politics of Development in Africa.
-
Upload
nathaniel-norton -
Category
Documents
-
view
217 -
download
1
Transcript of How does the nature of African governments limit development? Politics of Development in Africa.
How does the nature of African governments limit development?
Politics of Development in Africa
Issues
• Political instability
• Domestic policies
• Poor governance
• Kleptocracy and corruption
Political instability
• In recent history many African countries have experienced drastic political changes
• From 1954-2005 there were 186 military coups and 15 African presidents were assassinated
What is a military coup?
• A military coup, or coup d’etat, is when the military uses force to get rid of the government
• Often, the military go on to take control of the country, leading to a military regime
• Political Situation in the Central African Republic since Independence
– 1960-1962 Restricted Democratic Practice– 1962-1966 One Party State (MESAN)– 1966-1976 Military Regime & One Party State – 1976-1979 One Party State (MESAN)– 1979-1980 Transitional Period– 1980-1981 One Party State (UDC)– 1981 Restricted Democratic Practice– 1981-1987 Military Regime– 1987-1991 One Party State (RDC)– 1991-1993 Multiparty Transition– 1993-2003 Democracy– 2003-2005 Military Regime– 2005- Democracy
Political instability hinders development
• Why?– Leaders focus on simply holding onto power– Expensive projects which would lead to long
term development (e.g. developing roads, telecommunications, health and education) are neglected
However…
• Stable government is not always good for development– Robert Mugabe has
been president of Zimbabwe since 1980 but the country is experiencing major problems
Domestic policies
• Many African governments are poor at creating and implementing policies for development– Many spend more on military than on
essential services • E.g. Eritrea spend 19% of GDP on
military but only 4% on education)– Tariffs and minimum prices which
prevent them increasing their share of international trade
• Cotton trade has frozen in Malawi due to high minimum prices imposed by the government
Eritrea
Life Expectancy: 53.73 male, 58.71 female
Infant mortality: 44.34 deaths/1000 live births
Where is Eritrea?
Poor governance
• This is a factor in a lot of Africa’s problems• Features of bad governments:
– ‘amateur’ politicians in place who got their jobs through nepotism and/or military coups
• 32 African countries experienced military rule during the 20th century – soldiers are not trained politicians
– Police cannot be trusted– Taxes are not collected effectively– Government cannot be counted on to deliver key
services– Human rights are abused
Kleptocracy
• Many African states are kleptocracies– A kleptocracy is a system in which leaders
use their power to benefit themselves
• Those who go along with the system get to share the rewards, while those who speak out suffer
How big is the problem?
• Of course, not all African politicians are corrupt
• However, late Nigerian Dictator Sani Abacha stole between $1 billion and $3 billion in the space of 5 years
• All this corruption diverts money away from aid projects and essential services
Addicted to aid
Remember…
• not all governments are inept and corrupt – there are many examples of good governance in Africa
• Ghana and Botswana are seen as solid democracies
Ghana: Supporters campaign for John Atta Mills, who went on to win the 2008 presidential election
Case studyUganda: The Poverty Eradication Action Plan
• Aim: to reduce poverty• Features:
– modernisation of agriculture– expansion and diversification of exports– reducing corruption– improving electric power supplies
• Successes: 6% economic growth rate• Challenges: many Ugandans feel that they are
becoming poorer while a small group are getting the benefits