Social Contracts for Development

Page 25

Overview

Introduction Although some Sub-Saharan African countries are catching up to higherincome countries, many are falling behind despite their best efforts and those of the development community. Since their independence, a number of African countries have faced state-building and governance challenges, sometimes in the context of widespread political turbulence, civil conflict, military rule, and state failure, which has resulted in unevenness of national state capacity (asymmetrical state capabilities that vary across sector, scale of government, and over time), weakened political settlements, and ineffective civil society. The COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic could exacerbate these challenges and lead to the emergence of new ones from the socioeconomic effects of containment measures. To explain current development outcomes and inform reforms, an increasing number of development partners are integrating sociopolitical framings into their strategies and programs. Development policy of the 1980s and 1990s often focused on liberalization, privatization, and austerity, aimed at reducing or limiting the size and scope of the state. These reforms were later criticized for their shortcomings, which spurred a rethinking of the approach to statebuilding and development. The World Development Report 2017: Governance and the Law, for example, argues that “policies that should be effective in generating positive development outcomes are often not adopted, are poorly implemented, or end up backfiring over time” (World Bank 2017, 2), and that the radically uneven character of public policy formulation, implementation, and enforcement is a matter of governance, namely, “the process through which state and nonstate actors interact to design and implement policies within a given set of formal and informal rules that shape and are shaped by power” (World Bank 2017, 3). 1


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Articles inside

How Can the World Bank and Other Partners Engage with Social Contracts?

3min
pages 120-121

Analysis to Understand Chronic Policy Failure and Identify Opportunities for Reform

3min
pages 118-119

A Diagnostic: Understanding Social Contract Dynamics, Opportunities, and Obstacles to Reform

3min
pages 116-117

References

11min
pages 109-115

Notes

1min
page 108

Social Accountability and the Social Contract

6min
pages 103-105

Response to COVID-19

4min
pages 106-107

Normative Aspects of Social Contracts: The Case of Human Rights

2min
page 100

Inequality, the Social Contract, and Electoral Support

4min
pages 101-102

African Protests and Reshaping the Social Contract

11min
pages 95-99

The Taxation Challenge in Africa: Cause and Effect of Prevailing Social Contracts

4min
pages 86-87

The Role of Social Contract Fragmentation in Conflict and Fragility

7min
pages 92-94

South Africa: A Dynamic Social Contract

4min
pages 78-79

Somalia: The Role of Nonstate Actors in Shaping the Social Contract

2min
page 77

Senegal: Collaboration across Actors for a Stable Social Contract

2min
page 76

The Conceptual Framework in Context

5min
pages 69-71

Cameroon: Lack of Responsiveness in the Social Contract

4min
pages 72-73

References

2min
pages 67-68

Annex 3B Country Codes

1min
page 65

Annex 3A Empirical Methodology and Summary Statistics

6min
pages 61-64

Notes

2min
page 66

References

1min
pages 29-30

Introduction

3min
pages 25-26

Social Contract Theory and Development in Africa

13min
pages 37-42

Social Contract Definition and Conceptual Framework

16min
pages 47-54

Introduction

6min
pages 31-33
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