Title of article :
Good Governance and Development in the Least Developed Countries
Author/Authors :
Kwame Sundaram, Jomo United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN-DESA) , Chowdhury, Anis UN-DESA and Professor of Economics (on leave), University of Western Sydney, Australia
Abstract :
The paper highlights the conceptual limitations or lack of the clarity
of ‘ good governance’ concept favoured by the donor community and
debunks its central hypothesis that good governance causes economic
growth. Good governance can mean many things and countries possessing
features of good governance can be different both structurally
and institutionally. Countries that are developed recently did not
have the ideal features of good governance – these features evolved
with economic growth. Donors should not impose onerous good governance
conditions with the expectation that developing countries must
all look the same in the image of the recent developed countries. Most
poor countries do not have administrative and financial capacity to
achieve these reforms or institutions; hence, the donor conditionality
often becomes a recipe for failure. Therefore, the reform agenda should
aim at strategic bottlenecks for development and enhance state capacity
and capabilities to deal with these bottlenecks.
Keywords :
Good Governance , Development , Least Developed Countries
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics