Institutions, Incentives and Service Provision: Bringing Politics Back In

Abstract

This paper outlines a conceptual framework for analyzing the politics of service provisioning. The approach uses as its point of departure the ‘accountability framework’ of relations between citizens, clients and service providers, laid out in the World Bank’s 2004 World Development Report. That framework highlights two distinctive ways of governing public service provision - a performance-oriented top-down hierarchy with goals shaped by the overall political process, and participatory approaches which link clients and providers. But a focus on these two polar approaches deflects attention from the vast spaces in the middle: the many countries where governance falls well short of ‘good’, but is better than disastrous; and the many layers within a specific sector in-between the top-levels of policymaking and the service provision front line. A central hypothesis of this paper is that these in-between spaces are major domains of political, stakeholder and organizational behaviour. These are sources both of within-country and across-country variation in the quality of public service provision and also provide the locus where many opportunities for achieving gains in performance are to be found.

Citation

Levy, B.; Walton, M. Institutions, Incentives and Service Provision: Bringing Politics Back In. Effective States and Inclusive Development Research Centre (ESID), University of Manchester, Manchester, UK (2013) 40 pp. ISBN 978-1-908749-16-1 [ESID Working Paper No. 18]

Institutions, Incentives and Service Provision: Bringing Politics Back In

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2013