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Rent-Seeking, Institutions and Reforms In Africa : Theory and Empirical Evidence for Tanzania /

By: Fischer, Pius V [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2006.Description: XXIV, 682 p. 47 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780387337739.Subject(s): Culture -- Study and teaching | Economic policy | Social policy | Development economics | Economics | Development Economics | Regional and Cultural Studies | Economic Policy | Social PolicyDDC classification: 338.9 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Why Is Rent-Seeking Relevant for Developing Countries and Their Reforms? -- What Is Rent-Seeking? -- Evaluating Rents, Rent-Seeking Investments and Rent-Seeking Costs -- Addressing Fundamentals: Explaining the Motivation for and Success of Rent-Seeking Behaviour and Policies -- Reforms, Rent-Seeking and Rent-Seeking Opposition -- Rent-Seeking: Empirical Evidence for Tanzania -- From Socialist Ideology to Rent-Seeking Reality -- Stabilisation and Structural Adjustment in Tanzania: A Rent-Seeking Approach to Explain Reform Records -- Where Rent-Seekers Seek Rents: Parastatals—Hardliners in a Rent-Seeking Economy -- Conclusions and Policy Recommendations.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book identifies rent-seeking behaviour as one of the main causes of poor economic performance, observed, among other places, in many countries of Africa. Rent-seeking describes the ability to capture incomes without producing output or making a productive contribution. Since rent-seekers are often an integral part of an ailing economy and resist the adoption of reforms, understanding and anticipating rent-seeking behaviour is crucial for designing more adequate and effective policy reforms. Following a comprehensive theoretical elaboration of the causes, properties and consequences of rents and rent-seeking strategies in the context of economic reforms and development cooperation, this book presents a detailed case study on rent-seeking within the civil service, parastatal sector and business community. It demonstrates how rent-seekers in Tanzania have systematically delayed or undermined reforms such as tax reforms, trade liberalisation, privatisation or any reforms that aim to restrain corruption and embezzlement. The case study quantifies and evaluates the rent-seeking behaviour of more than 300 parastatal companies, considering their profits and losses, the quality and timeliness of their accounting and the magnitude of support they obtained from 16 different sources. Though it is often difficult to describe rent-seeking empirically—many aspects are hidden and obscured by all sorts of fake explanations—the study at hand explores the maze of endless, general and disaggregated information and traces as many indications of rent-seeking as possible. This broad and detailed approach makes the study unique not only for Tanzania but also within the literature on rent-seeking and development cooperation.
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Why Is Rent-Seeking Relevant for Developing Countries and Their Reforms? -- What Is Rent-Seeking? -- Evaluating Rents, Rent-Seeking Investments and Rent-Seeking Costs -- Addressing Fundamentals: Explaining the Motivation for and Success of Rent-Seeking Behaviour and Policies -- Reforms, Rent-Seeking and Rent-Seeking Opposition -- Rent-Seeking: Empirical Evidence for Tanzania -- From Socialist Ideology to Rent-Seeking Reality -- Stabilisation and Structural Adjustment in Tanzania: A Rent-Seeking Approach to Explain Reform Records -- Where Rent-Seekers Seek Rents: Parastatals—Hardliners in a Rent-Seeking Economy -- Conclusions and Policy Recommendations.

This book identifies rent-seeking behaviour as one of the main causes of poor economic performance, observed, among other places, in many countries of Africa. Rent-seeking describes the ability to capture incomes without producing output or making a productive contribution. Since rent-seekers are often an integral part of an ailing economy and resist the adoption of reforms, understanding and anticipating rent-seeking behaviour is crucial for designing more adequate and effective policy reforms. Following a comprehensive theoretical elaboration of the causes, properties and consequences of rents and rent-seeking strategies in the context of economic reforms and development cooperation, this book presents a detailed case study on rent-seeking within the civil service, parastatal sector and business community. It demonstrates how rent-seekers in Tanzania have systematically delayed or undermined reforms such as tax reforms, trade liberalisation, privatisation or any reforms that aim to restrain corruption and embezzlement. The case study quantifies and evaluates the rent-seeking behaviour of more than 300 parastatal companies, considering their profits and losses, the quality and timeliness of their accounting and the magnitude of support they obtained from 16 different sources. Though it is often difficult to describe rent-seeking empirically—many aspects are hidden and obscured by all sorts of fake explanations—the study at hand explores the maze of endless, general and disaggregated information and traces as many indications of rent-seeking as possible. This broad and detailed approach makes the study unique not only for Tanzania but also within the literature on rent-seeking and development cooperation.

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