State Capability and Prospects for Close Co-ordination: Considerations for Industrial Policy in Africa

Abstract

Recent research highlights the considerable potential of industrial policy to support structural transformation in sub-Saharan Africa. Given the importance of the state in industrial policy, this paper considers the implications for these discussions of recent work on state fragility. It argues that weaknesses in state capacity in the region can be expected to severely limit the likelihood of successful industrial policy in a number of countries—indeed, over a half of them, if we believe standard metrics. It concludes that more attention should be paid in work on industrial policy to the systematic study of weak state capacity and strategies to address the challenges it poses, including ‘islands of excellence’.

Citation

Gisselquist, R.M. State Capability and Prospects for Close Co-ordination: Considerations for Industrial Policy in Africa. UNU-WIDER, Helsinki, Finland (2015) 18 pp. [WIDER Working Paper No. 2015/035]

State Capability and Prospects for Close Co-ordination: Considerations for Industrial Policy in Africa

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2015