The politics of governing oil effectively: a comparative study of two new oil-rich states in Africa

Abstract

The challenges facing developing countries with new-found natural resource wealth are generally understood in terms of whether they have the institutions of 鈥榞ood governance鈥� 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 鈥榮emi-authoritarian鈥� Uganda seems to be governing oil somewhat more in line with its national interest as compared to 鈥榙emocratic鈥� Ghana. We find that bureaucratic 鈥榩ockets of effectiveness鈥� play a critical role, with outcomes shaped by the nature of their embedded autonomy vis-脿-vis different kinds of ruling coalition. Efforts to promote 鈥榖est-practice鈥� 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 鈥榙evelopmental collusion鈥� between political and bureaucratic actors may offer more appropriate or 鈥榖est-fit鈥� solutions.

Citation

Hickey, S.; Abdulai, A-G.; Izama, A.; Mohan, G. The politics of governing oil effectively: a comparative study of two new oil-rich states in Africa. University of Manchester, Manchester, UK (2015) 36 pp.

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2015