Regulatory Governance In Developing Countries.

Abstract

The past decade has seen a quickening of the pace and extent of privatisation reforms in developing countries. An associated set of post-privatisation policies has seen the introduction of new and changed regulatory institutions. This book critically reviews regulatory reforms in developing countries, with a particular focus on the strengths and weaknesses of the 'best practice' model of reform, the significance of institutions of regulatory governance, and the impact of post-privatisation governance on development and poverty reduction agendas. The contents are divided into four parts: Part I: Conceptualising Regulation: Governance and Development, Part II: Case Studies in Institutional Reform, Part III: Regulation, Markets and the Poor: Cases from South Africa and the Philippines, Part IV: Capacity Building for Regulation. The contributors are: E.M. Alampay, E.L. Basilio, J. Brown, L. Carino, J.C. Cuaresma, D. Eldridge, B. Goulden, P.E. Legaspi, G. Mackintosh, G. Majone, M. Minogue, K. Müller, A. Ogus, N. Phillips, F. Uys, P. Vass, P. Woodhouse, and Q. Zhang.

Citation

Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA, Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, CRC Series on Competition, Regulation and Development, 352 pp.

Regulatory Governance In Developing Countries.

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2006