How Political Insiders Lose Out When International Aid Underperforms: Evidence from a Participatory Development Experiment in Ghana

Kate Baldwin, Dean S. Karlan, C. Udry, E. Appiah
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Participatory development is designed to mitigate problems of political bias in pre-existing local government but also interacts with it in complex ways. Using a five-year randomized controlled study in 97 clusters of villages (194 villages) in Ghana, we analyze the effects of a major participatory development program on participation in, leadership of and investment by preexisting political institutions, and on households’ overall socioeconomic well-being. Applying theoretical insights on political participation and redistributive politics, we consider the possibility of both cross-institutional mobilization and displacement, and heterogeneous effects by partisanship. We find the government and its political supporters acted with high expectations for the participatory approach: treatment led to increased participation in local governance and reallocation of resources. But the results did not meet expectations, resulting in a worsening of socioeconomic wellbeing in treatment versus control villages for government supporters. This demonstrates international aid’s complex distributional consequences.
当国际援助表现不佳时,政治圈内人是如何损失的:来自加纳参与式发展实验的证据
参与式发展旨在减轻现有地方政府的政治偏见问题,但也以复杂的方式与之互动。通过对加纳97个村庄集群(194个村庄)进行的一项为期五年的随机对照研究,我们分析了一项重大参与式发展计划对现有政治机构的参与、领导和投资以及家庭整体社会经济福祉的影响。运用政治参与和再分配政治的理论见解,我们考虑了跨机构动员和流离失所的可能性,以及党派关系的异质性影响。我们发现政府及其政治支持者对参与式方法抱有很高的期望:治疗导致更多地参与地方治理和资源重新分配。但结果没有达到预期,导致政府支持者在治疗村与对照村的社会经济福利恶化。这表明国际援助的复杂分配后果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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