Good governance facades

By Kalle Moene and Tina Søreide

Introduction

Fashions come and go in the development community. When a policy idea becomes popular, some governments implement a cosmetic variant of the policy. What looks like development, are institutional façades; pretty from the outside, ugly from the inside. A good governance façade can be introduced deliberately to mislead observers and stakeholders to cover political theft. An example from the past is development planning, introduced with good intentions but sometimes exploited as a cover for corruption. In the 1960s donors rewarded developing countries that introduced five years plans by offering more aid. Recipient governments were therefore tempted to come up with cosmetic plans to satisfy foreign donors rather than the needs of their citizens. With recipient governments appearing to follow the suggestions from development experts, the donors raised few questions about their actual performance. Accordingly, it became possible for recipients to appropriate aid money for personal enrichment without facing reactions from the donor community.

Fulltext (PDF)

Draft paper for Susan Rose-Ackerman and Paul Lagunes (Eds). 2015. Corruption: Global Influences, Politics and the Market, Edw. Elgar Publishing

By Moene, Kalle and Tina Søreide
Published Mar. 23, 2015 11:20 AM - Last modified Nov. 20, 2017 3:23 PM