Mozambique’s Samora Machel built a strong consensual
party with a succession tradition. Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni has not.
2012 was a tough year for African leaders: one
resigned, one was sacked, two were overthrown in coups, two were defeated in
elections, and three died in office. Even in states like Angola where
incumbents remained in power, the question of leadership succession was rarely
far from the agenda. In 2013 we can expect the topic also to be hot in
Madagascar, Kenya and Zimbabwe, all scheduled to hold Presidential elections
later this year.
Succession is an inevitability of political life,
and there are several ways to accomplish it, from dynastic inheritance to
assassination to a competition for votes. Some states do it better than others,
however, and it’s fair to say that Africa has had more than its share of
disorderly successions. Even where succession does not lead directly to
violence or state breakdown, uncertainty surrounding the process can damage
economic growth, as happened in fast-growing states like Kenya, Côte d’Ivoire
and Malawi in the 1970s and 1980s.
Economic
growth and leadership succession
Since African economies are now growing strongly
again, it seems pertinent to ask whether growth will once more be undermined by
problems of political succession. In many cases the answer unfortunately
appears to be ‘Yes’. Part of the problem is personal, or ‘big-man’ rule,
sometimes called ‘neo-patrimonialism’.
These forms of governance are not necessarily obstacles to economic growth;
however, growth under the purer types of personal rule rarely lasts more than
one or two decades. When pro-growth policies and property arrangements are
closely associated with just one man (or woman), the demise of that individual
is likely to induce damaging uncertainty in investors.
So how do states avoid the succession trap? In a new Paper for the Developmental Regimes in Africa Project, I answer this
question by comparing sub-Saharan Africa with Southeast Asia, a similar, but
economically more successful region. I combine historical analysis with
systematic comparison to tease out the factors uniting those countries that
combined high growth with succession (Laos, Malaysia, Mozambique, Thailand and
Vietnam), and distinguishing those that fell into a succession trap (Côte
d’Ivoire, Indonesia, Kenya, Malawi).
I found that high growth was more likely to be
sustained through succession if leaders handed over power before the age of 75,
if the country had a fairly homogenous ethnic structure, if the state had its
roots in an identifiable pre-colonial political formation, and if the external
economic environment was favourable. However, there were exceptions across the
board, making these contributing, not crucial, conditions.
In addition, I found a combination of three
conditions present across all the regimes that combined succession with high
growth, and absent from those that didn’t. First, leaders were motivated to
search for growth to stave off perceived threats to their survival from
external aggression, popular mobilization, and/or resource scarcity.
Second,
all had broadly pro-market and pro-foreign investment policy packages, although
all retained substantial state involvement in the economy. And third, all the
successful regimes embedded policy-making in strong institutions of one or
other of two types:a dominant party with a tradition of consensual
decision-making and leadership succession, ora strong, organic bureaucracy,
effectively insulated from changes in political leadership.
Examples
Mozambique provides an example of the first type.
Between 1997 and 2010, the country experienced growth of 7.83 percent, despite
a change of leadership in the ruling Liberation Front of Mozambique (FRELIMO).
FRELIMO was formed in opposition to Portuguese rule in 1962 by an elite group
of assimilated Africans.
A tradition of orderly succession was established in
1969, when Eduardo Mondlane, FRELIMO’s founding president, was killed by a
parcel bomb. Although party vice-president Uria T. Simango was appointed successor
at a meeting of the Executive Committee, this decision was overturned by
FRELIMO’s more powerful Central Committee, with Samora Machel becoming
President. When Machel died in a plane crash in 1986, the Central Committee
nominated Joaquim Chissano as President. In 2002, Chissano announced that he
would not contest the next Presidential election, and the party congress
nominated Armando Guebuza to succeed him.
Like all political parties, FRELIMO has its
tensions, but these are muted by an impressive sense of mutual loyalty and
internal cohesion. Forged during the liberation war, unity has been maintained
even though FRELIMO has abandoned its historic commitment to socialism and
taken measures to encourage private enterprise. A stream of investments has
followed.
Thailand is (the only) example of the second type.
Between 1961 and 1998 growth there averaged more than 7 percent,
notwithstanding more than 15 leadership changes, as power oscillated between
military factions and weak civilian parties. Predictability was provided by an
organic bureaucracy with roots in the 19th century, in which specialized
pro-growth agencies were created in the 1950s. Continuity in the mission and
personnel of these agencies gave domestic and international investors confidence,
despite a bewildering number of political successions.
Growth
and succession in contemporary Africa
Currently there are three countries in Africa that
have maintained high growth for more than a decade but have yet to experience a
political succession: Angola, Rwanda and Uganda. All are ruled by dominant
‘liberation struggle’ parties. More research is needed, but it seems probable
that the RPF in Rwanda has some of the same unity of purpose as FRELIMO,
despite the towering presence of Paul Kagame, and the prospects for succession
with growth appear good.
In Angola and Uganda, however, leaders are older,
external threats are less severe, and despite their post-liberation history,
power is more personalised. In states like this, the prospects for combining
succession with growth are poor.
To avoid the succession trap, political and economic
actors need to devise institutions that can supply credible commitments for
investors in a context of transition. In 17th century England, this happened
when the King acceded to a range of formal checks on his power, an experience
echoed in currently fashionable development thinking like Prime Minister David
Cameron’s ‘golden thread’ or Acemoglu and Robinson’s ‘inclusive institutions’.
Successful Asian and African countries have done things differently, however.
Making strong but personalised ruling
parties more collegial and consensual, or strengthening and insulating the
bureaucracy where parties are weak, might be more realistic alternatives.
Note
[1] I excluded countries with a population of under
five million (eg Botswana) and also countries where a portion of the growth
phase could be accounted for by a peace dividend (eg Ethiopia, Myanmar). I
defined high growth as growth of at least 7% per annum.
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