Adjusting to Reality

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A01=Robert Klitgaard
Administrative Integration
Adverse Incentives
Agent Client Relationship
anti-corruption strategies
Arms Length Contract Relationship
Author_Robert Klitgaard
Brazil
case studies from Bolivia
Category=GTP
Category=KCL
Category=KCM
Central Government
corruption
decentralisation in governance
decentralization
Deter Mining
development policy analysis
economic reforms in developing countries
elitism
elitism and corruption
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ethnic Correlates
Ethnic Inequalities
ethnic inequality solutions
Fishermen's Cooperative Society
Fishermen’s Cooperative Society
global economic and social inequality
Governmental Reorganization
Improve Dairy Production
inclusive development
India
indigenous groups
Indonesia
information asymmetry in development
Informational Improvements
institutional economics
institutional foundations free markets
integration
Ivory Coast
Make Markets Work
Malaysia
Marketing Boards
Marketing Improvements
meritocracy
overcentralization
Pakistan
Pay For Performance
Peru
Poor Outcome Measures
Project Performance Audit Report
public sector reform
quality in emergence national economy
role of state in economic development
Shrimp Processing Plant
Spatial Market Integration
Tamil Nadu
the Philippines
Victor Paz Estenssoro
Violated
World Development Report

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032040196
  • Weight: 600g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Originally published in 1991, Robert Klitgaard’s classic book addresses questions of enduring relevance in a lively and insightful way. Bribes, tribes, and markets that fail—these are the realities in many developing countries. The usual strategies for reform—be they capitalist or socialist—have failed to address them effectively. What is to be done when economic reforms leave the poor behind or when when new constitutions and elections are undercut by inefficient bureaucracies, overcentralization, and corruption? And what to do about persistent ethnic inequalities within developing countries?

The book provides inspiring examples from around the world, as well as analytical frameworks to guide inclusive policy discussion. Theorists will enjoy the novel uses of industrial economics, the theory of the firm, and the economics of discrimination. The book highlights overlooked causes of underdevelopment: imperfect information and weak information processing in individuals and institutions.

In the preface, the former President of Panama, Dr. Nicolás Ardito Barletta, writes:

"Poverty, Klitgaard argues, is—and should be—a principal concern of development strategists, but policy makers and analysts will continue to run from pillar to post in their search for a cure unless they can adjust their development schemes to reality…."

"The new approach that the author proposes is based on two fundamental principles. One is that the proper choice of economic strategies cannot be determined in the abstract but depends on particular circumstances… The other is that information is at the heart of problems in the real world of the developing countries… Klitgaard offers examples from Bolivia, Brazil, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan, Peru, and the Philippines to make his point.

"The author suggests creative ways in which the state and citizens themselves can solve their own ‘inevitably unique problems.’ One of the key tasks, in Klitgaard’s view, is to ensure that environments are rich in information. This volume offers a broad framework for policy analysis that moves us closer to intelligent solutions to the real problems of the real poor in the modern world."

Robert Klitgaard is a University Professor at Claremont Graduate University. Formerly a professor at Harvard, Yale, and the National University of Singapore, he has also served as the Dean of the Pardee RAND Graduate School, America’s foremost Ph.D. program in policy analysis. His eleven books include Tropical Gangsters, named one of the New York Times Books of the Century.

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