Tim Kelsall has written a seminal book that identifies the management of rents as the central factor determining the economic performance of African countries. Business, Politics and the State in Africa advances the debate on governance and development into a new and more productive field, and is sure to stand as a key text for the next decade. * Alex de Waal, Executive Director, World Peace Foundation *
Revealing the evolution of Ghana's, Tanzania's, Ethiopia's and Rwanda's development policy and performance, the empirically-grounded narratives laid out in this book constitute a bracing antidote to the intellectual and ethical complacence behind the mainstream championing of good governance and a level-playing-field business environment as ways forward for development. The authors' findings and conclusions are sure to be profoundly discomfiting for practitioners - in ways which contribute to, and hopefully will help, spur the new thinking which is urgently needed. * Brian Levy, School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University and University of Cape Town, and formerly a World Bank governance adviser *
Tim Kelsall provides fresh perspectives on an old post-colonial African conundrum. He presents highly nuanced arguments grounded in empirical detail to hint at the possibility that some forms of clientelistic politics might actually conduce to development in African states. * E. Gyimah-Boadi, Executive Director of the Ghana Center for Democratic Development/Afrobarometer and Professor in Political Science, University of Ghana *
Recent growth trends in sub-Saharan Africa have been hailed by the proponents of neoliberalism as a strong affirmation of their policy doctrine. Tim Kelsall's volume not only challenges the triumphalism of neoliberals but points to the kinds of state and business coalitions that can generate policies towards structurally transforming African economies. The book combines solid theoretical reasoning with detailed case studies from Asia and Africa. A welcome and timely addition to the literature. * Howard Stein, Professor, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor *
It is delightful to be puzzling more over Africa's successes than its failures. It is great to read a book that both helps us to puzzle and points to the likely answers. When all that is done in clear prose, we have something well worth reading. * Mick Moore, Professorial Fellow, Institute of Development Studies *
A stimulating book, well worth reading for those also grappling with the policy dilemmas involved * Nicholas Westcott in International Affairs *
This is an important and original book, which deserves wide circulation, particularly within the aid industry. Laying to rest the assumption that good governance is the pre-condition to development, it offers an enlightening model of how development patrimonialism can, under specific conditions, be harnessed for the type of sustained economic growth that may lift African countries out of their underdevelopment. * Patrick Chabal, King's College London *
Offering a fresh and sweeping perspective that provides insight into the necessary political conditions for economic development, Kelsall demonstrates how contemporary African regimes can move their economies toward more productive trajectories. Rather than reviving the familiar nostrums of good governance and best practices, this book argues that regimes (and potentially donors as well) should work with the grain to solve basic collective action problems that will enable economic change. This concise, compelling and readable argument will be useful for advancing the understanding of scholars and practitioners alike. * Peter Lewis, Johns Hopkins University, School of Advanced International Studies *