The world system and the hollowing out of state capacity: how structural adjustment programs affect bureaucratic quality in developing countries

Reinsberg, B. , Kentikelenis, A., Stubbs, T. and King, L. (2019) The world system and the hollowing out of state capacity: how structural adjustment programs affect bureaucratic quality in developing countries. American Journal of Sociology, 124(4), pp. 1222-1257. (doi: 10.1086/701703)

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Abstract

The administrative ability of the state to deliver effective policy is essential for economic development. While sociologists have long devoted attention to domestic forces underpinning state capacity, the authors focus on world system pressures from Western-dominated international organizations. Scrutinizing policy reforms mandated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the authors argue that “structural conditions” exert deleterious effects on bureaucratic quality by increasing the risk of bureaucrats falling prey to special interests and narrowing potential policy instruments available to them. The authors test these arguments using a new data set on IMF conditionality from 1985 to 2014. Their analysis shows that structural conditions—especially conditions on privatization, price deregulation, and public sector employment—reduce bureaucratic quality. Using instrumentation techniques, the authors also discount the possibility that the relationship is driven by the IMF imposing structural conditions precisely in countries with low bureaucratic quality. A careful reconsideration of IMF policy reforms is therefore required to avoid undermining local institutions.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Reinsberg, Dr Bernhard
Authors: Reinsberg, B., Kentikelenis, A., Stubbs, T., and King, L.
College/School:College of Social Sciences > School of Social and Political Sciences > Politics
Journal Name:American Journal of Sociology
Publisher:University of Chicago Press
ISSN:0002-9602
ISSN (Online):1537-5390
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2019 The University of Chicago
First Published:First published in American Journal of Sociology 124(4):1222-1257
Publisher Policy:Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher

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