How Political Insiders Lose Out When International Aid Underperforms : Evidence from a Participatory Development Experiment in Ghana
Kate Baldwin, Dean Karlan, Christopher R. Udry, Ernest Appiah
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
Year of publication: |
April 2020
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Authors: | Baldwin, Kate |
Other Persons: | Karlan, Dean (contributor) ; Udry, Christopher (contributor) ; Appiah, Ernest (contributor) |
Institutions: | National Bureau of Economic Research (contributor) |
Publisher: |
2020: Cambridge, Mass : National Bureau of Economic Research |
Subject: | Ghana | Entwicklungshilfe | Development aid | Partizipation | Participation | Politik | Politics |
Saved in:
freely available