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“The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa” Louis A. Picard University of Pittsburgh USA

“The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

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“The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”. Louis A. Picard University of Pittsburgh USA. SOURCE:. Louis A. Picard The State of the State: Institutional Transformation, Capacity and Political Change in South Africa - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

“The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Louis A. PicardUniversity of Pittsburgh

USA

Page 2: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

SOURCE:

Louis A. Picard

The State of the State: Institutional Transformation, Capacity and Political Change in South Africa

(Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2005)

Page 3: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Next Two BooksThe State Transformed: Negotiations, Liberalism and Democracy in South Africa

States within the State: Provinces, Local Government and Governance in South Africa

Both Books to be Published by Wits University Press as part of the P&DM series on Governance.

Page 4: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

BiographyLouis A. Picard is Professor in the Division of International Development of the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs of the University of Pittsburgh in the USA and is Visiting Research Professor at the Graduate School of Public and Development Management (P&DM) of the University of Witwatersrand. He has studied African Politics since 1965 and has focused on the South African transition for more than twenty years. His other area of interest is Foreign Aid Policy.

Page 5: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

GOVERNANCE

AN OVERVIEW OF ISSUES

Page 6: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Research Themes

1. Institutional patterns of Democratic Governance

2. Decentralized Democratic Models

3. Foreign Aid and Technical Assistance

4. Organizational and Institutional Capacity

Page 7: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Book Focus: The Institutional State The institutional state can be defined as the set

of structures and processes;

including the public service, the nature of intra-governmental social relationships, and internal organizational dynamics;

which—though it evolves over time—is a permanent part of the dynamics of government.

Page 8: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Governance: an Overview of Issues Basic Term: The Environment of Development

Governance

Manner in which the state is created, modified or overthrown

Ways in Which Decisions are Made and Implemented

Governance is a Process not a Structure

Page 9: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Tentative Universal Governance Functions

1. Governance- Legal, Expected Roles, Intra-state Relationships;

2. Governance and Markets- Debates about Command Economies

3. Governance and Social Service Delivery

Page 10: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Principles of Governance

1. Provision of Goods and Services (including law and security)

2. Difference between Provision and Production (Implications of Exchange Theory for Contracting)

3. Types of Goods

Page 11: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

The Need for Implementation in Governance The Institutional State- Societal vs. Individual or

group interests

Structures and Processes of government beyond patronage and Crony Capitalism

Made up of Human and Structural (Organizational) Dynamics

Goal: Formal Rules, Common Values and Standard Modes of Behavior

Page 12: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Governance and Service Delivery Factors of Size, Difficulty and Normative Values-

User Fees vs. Taxes and Cross-Subsidization

Key Value: Public vs. Private- Basis of Human Judgment

Goal: Matching Provision with Nature of Goods and Value Systems of Communities

Debate: Contracting vs. Direct Delivery

Page 13: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Types of Democracy- Terms

Direct Democracy-

Actual direct participation of a population in decision-making about laws and regulations

Town hall or village model

Village meeting (Baraza or Kgotla)

Use of Referendum and Recall

Page 14: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Types of Democracy: Terms

Indirect Democracy-Representation

Some form of representative democracy

Hallmark of Modern Government

Existence of various diverse interest associations and groups within society

Page 15: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Discussion One

If a citizen asks “Is South Africa a ‘True’ Democracy?” how should one respond?

How appropriate are South African governance institutions for development?

Page 16: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

South Africa and Development

FACTORS DETERMINING DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE

Page 17: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Factors Influencing Governance

1. Imperial Legacies

2. Political Culture, Social Values and Governance

3. Contemporary External Influences (Foreign Aid)

4. Informal and Parallel Functions of Governance

Page 18: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Factor 1: World Wide Legacy of Imperial Rule: A Mini-Comparison Land Based- Austria, Germany, Russia,

Ottoman Empires

Overseas- Britain, France, Spain, Portugal, Holland, etc.

Western Hemisphere Dominance

Japan vs. China

Page 19: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

The Legacy of the Colonial State in Africa1. Patron-Client State System and Corporate Group

Interests

2. Unpredictable and “soft” but centralized system of governance

3. An administratively based local state which precludes local level decision-making (Prefect or Commissioner)

4. Authoritarian Control Mechanisms

Page 20: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Factor 2: Political Culture, Social Values and Governance Secular vs. Religious Tendencies “Ethnic” Values Nation-States vs. Dominant vs. Minority,

Multiple Nation States, Spillover Nation States

Nature of Democratic vs. Hierarchical Values

Values, Ideology and State

Page 21: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Factor 3: External Assistance: Globalization Constraints Debates about Public vs. Private Sector (SAPS)

Failure of Growth and Distribution (Limits of Economic Development)

Merging of Governance and Security Focus

“Soft” vs. “Hard” Donors

Multi-lateral Regimes (World Bank System)

Integration vs. Autonomous Development

Page 22: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Factor 4: Parallel Governance and Non-Formal Systems

1. Persistent- traditional, religious leadership

2. Adaptive- non-formal transportation systems

3. Reactive- Religious, ethnic networks

4. Intermediation- Civic Groups

Page 23: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Discussion Two

DOES (OR CAN) FOREIGN AID PROMOTE DEVELOPMENT?

Do Parallel Institutions contribute to Development?

Page 24: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

South Africa

THE STATE OF THE STATE

Page 25: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

South Africa: 1994-2006 Three Tasks: Defined by SA Government

The Development of a Non-racial state and public service

The Development of a balance between the private and public sector that could meet the country’s overwhelming social needs

The Creation of a Policy Making process that could plan, coordinate and manage economic development

Page 26: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

The Problem The Poor Record of Development State

Efforts in much of Africa

The Nature of Global Political Economy

Debates About Service Delivery and Transformation

The Future of the Developmental State?

Page 27: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

The South African Legacy

1.Historical Debates- Charterism and Non-Racialism

2. Legacy of Negotiations- Job Guarantees and Provincial Capacity

3. Civil Service Reform- Limits of Reorganization

Page 28: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Measuring Capacity in South Africa1. The Priority Given to Human Resource

Development?

2. The Impact of Corruption and Patronage

3. To Reform or Not to Reform Higher Education

4. Salaries, Group Interests and Privileges

Page 29: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

The Dilemmas of Human Resource Development (HRD) and Service Delivery1. Training and Education

2. Short Term vs. Long Term Investment

3. Bounded Knowledge and Bridging Training

4. Generic vs. Value Based Skills Development

Page 30: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Mpumalanga

“The State of the Province?”

Page 31: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Governance Issues

Focus on Provincial and Local Government

The Role of Intermediate Government

Local Government: Primary unit of government that has both political leadership and bureaucratic structures

Page 32: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Historical Legacy1. “Homeland” administrations and the Eastern

Transvaal administration;

2. Vested Interests During the Apartheid Period

3. Capacity Limitations and the State of the Province?

4. Debates about Provincial and Local Government

Page 33: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Decentralization and Governance

1. Administrative- Delegated, Deconcentrated Capacity

2. Fiscal- Extent of Collection and Expenditure of Local Revenue

3. Political- Bottom up- (Primary but not exclusive Focus)

4. Parallel vs. “Layer Cake” Decentralization

Page 34: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

South Africa and Decentralized Governance1. Centralized vs. Devolved Capacity

2. The Role of Provincial Governments

3. Urban vs. Rural Local Government

4. Metropolitan Regions vs. District Councils

5. Successes and Failures in Sub-National Governance

Page 35: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Discussion Three

Assessment of the State of the State, the Province and the Southern African Region

Page 36: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

Discussion Questions1. Affirmative Action: Should focus be on Education

vs. Employment in terms of Human Resource Development (HRD) - Trade Off: Capacity to Deliver Services

2. Governance: Should the focus be on Decentralization vs. Central Control

3. Development: Should focus be on State development vs. Market Development

4. Beyond Affirmative Action: The Use of Consultants and Contracting Out

Page 37: “The Developmental State in Africa (and Elsewhere): The Lessons for South Africa”

State of the Province

GENERAL DISCUSSION