'This important book, which synthesizes the large Ghana scholarship as well as using lots of original research by the author, makes a strong case for the country monograph and the generation of new knowledge about actually existing societies through serious, long-term fieldwork. At the same time, its comparative and theoretical relevance is much broader: as a companion volume to the influential The Politics of Industrial Policy in Africa, it clearly outlines the difficulties of transforming African states in a context of competitive clientelism and weak domestic capitalists. A must read for all interested in African political economy, the politics of development, and debates about economic diversification more generally.' Ricardo Soares de Oliveira, University of Oxford
'There is a growing consensus that we need to know more about who controls the economy, and how they do so, if we are to better understand contemporary Africa. This thorough and powerfully argued volume answers these questions for the case of Ghana. We need to read it, learn its lessons, and hope that it will inspire others to do the same for other African states.' Nic Cheeseman, University of Birmingham
'This book provides a convincing argument for the importance of industrial policy but it also explains the deep political constraints that confront countries with ambitious plans to industrialize. The detailed and extensive research on Ghana that underpins this book is impressive. The book advances an argument about the role of power in shaping economic outcomes that goes beyond conventional institutional analysis. It should be required reading for students and policy makers in an era when industrial policy is gaining increasing attention.' Hazel Gray, University of Edinburgh
'This book makes an exceptionally lucid and wide-ranging contribution to the literature the political economy of Ghanaian development, representing the distillation of over a decade of research by Whitfield on Ghana's puzzling lack of economic transformation. By examining the challenges to economic development in a country with a relatively positive trajectory of democratic governance, Whitfield's analysis resonates far beyond Ghana, raising crucial questions about how democracy and economic development might be achieved in tandem ... This book is essential reading for all those concerned with understanding why structural transformation has proved such an intractable challenge in Ghana, and what this implies for the prospects for development in postcolonial African states more broadly.' Tom Goodfellow, University of Sheffield