Understanding State-Building from a Political Economy Perspective
Author: Verena Fritz , Alina Rocha Menocal
Date: 2007
Size:
71 pages
(645 KB)
Access full text: available online
The need to build capable and accountable states has emerged as a leading priority for the international development community. This paper seeks to contribute to a more conceptually informed understanding of state-building, adopting a political economy perspective.
The paper starts out by explaining why state-building has become such a prominent objective on the international agenda and laying out the conceptual and historical foundations of the state and state-building. It argues that, while state-building is now a major issue of concern, it lacks conceptual clarity, including in language. State-building, nation-building, governance and democratisation are overlapping but distinct processes. The paper understands state formation and state-building as long-term, tumultuous and conflict-ridden processes that are also deeply political.
The paper then explores the evolving debate on state functions from both a conceptual and a more immediate state-building perspective. In the context of state-building situations in particular, it emphasise the need to distinguish between 'constitutive domains' of the state (political settlement, security/establishing a monopoly of violence and the rule of law, and building an administrative and fiscal system) and 'output domains', i.e. the range of public services that a state provides. Ultimately, the rationale for having states derives from expected outputs and services. However, for states to generate a reliable supply of services and other public goods, they must have a solid foundation in the 'constitutive domains'. Thinking predominantly about state functions in terms of outputs can lead to a relative neglect of these constitutive domains. One of the key messages in this paper is that the priority should be to start a process of institution-building in the constitutive domains, and to take a basic approach to output domains. The discussion also highlights that sequencing within domains rather than simply between them is crucial.
The paper also explores the roles played by domestic versus international actors in state-building processes. Domestic actors are crucial, but their perspectives on state-building and the incentives and constraints that they face in such situations have thus far received only limited attention. For external actors, one of the key challenges is that of coordination – especially where a particularly wide range of external actors is involved (foreign military, INGOs, development donors, international mediators, etc.) The question is how to maximise their positive impact while minimising the potentially harmful effects of their involvement.
The paper analyses three further overarching challenges to international efforts to promote state-building: 1) the ways in which certain political economy factors like corruption, competition for power and neo-patrimonial structures can hamper state-building projects in fundamental ways; 2) the limited evidence-based knowledge about ‘what works’ in building and reforming states; and 3) the viability of the state-building model that the international community has promoted, based on the simultaneous pursuit of institution-building, democratisation, and marketisation.
State-building efforts need to be shaped and led from within if they are to be legitimate and sustainable. Among other things, this calls for a greater understanding of the political economy of state-building, including a greater appreciation of the incentives, challenges and opportunities that various domestic actors face. The paper also draws out the following lessons and recommendations:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Fritz, V. and Menocal, A.R., 2007, 'Understanding State-Building from a Political Economy Perspective', Overseas Development Institute (ODI), London
Organisation: Overseas Development Institute (ODI), http://www.odi.org.uk/