Paul Cook and Sarah Mosedale (eds.). Regulation, Markets and Poverty.
Arif, G.M.
Paul Cook and Sarah Mosedale (eds.). Regulation, Markets and
Poverty. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2007. Price not given.
Most developing countries have been pursuing structural adjustment
programmes, driven by the World Bank and the IMF, for more than 25 years
without initially recognising the importance of regulation for economic
liberalisation. Without regulation the potential advantages of
liberalising markets were in danger of being diminished in terms of
improved efficiency and welfare. As a consequence, new forms of
regulation have been emerging that cover health, environment, industry,
employment and so on. This book examines the concepts and theories that
have driven these reforms and the particular contexts that have
influenced and conditioned them.
The research presented in the book was carried out at the Centre on
Regulation and Competition (CRC), University of Manchester, the United
Kingdom, over the past five years. It contains fourteen chapters
organised in five parts: competition, regulatory governance, regulation,
capacity building and poverty.
The first part, comprising three chapters, deals with competition
and competition policy, and shows that economic change depends on the
competitive process in which enterprises are displaced, replaced and
self-transformed as they grow at different rates. At the heart of this
transformation is innovation that depends critically on the institutions
of the market. But if markets are to generate innovation, then
innovation systems are needed that connect enterprises with other
knowledge-holding and generating organisations. The book also shows that
it is only recently that developing countries have begun to engage with
competition policy. Evidence from South East Asia suggests that
carefully designed state intervention has enhanced competition rather
than inhabited it. Countries that have achieved more competition in
their domestic economics have also seen their competitiveness in
international trade increase. Without effective competition policies,
privatisation and trade policy are much less likely to benefit the
economy.
Part II of the book considers the issues of regulatory governance
and regulatory transfer. The argument put forward in this part is that,
where corruption is deeply embedded in social behaviour, it may be more
effective to focus on reducing opportunities for corruption rather than
attempting to enforce anti-corruption measures. Regarding the working of
regulatory reforms, the evidence shown is that where privatisation has
been undertaken in a hurry, under intruded pressure, and in the absence
of good regulatory controls and competent institutions, the result has
been the massive enrichment of a small elite and enormous increase in
poverty. Policy-makers thus need good quality information on how the
complex negotiated process of regulation works in other countries.
Part III concentrates on aspects of utility regulation and
highlights two particular problems associated with utility regulation:
hold-up and information asymmetries. Hold up occurs when investment in
infrastructure is made, often involving large sunk costs, which provides
opportunities for opportunism or gaming by regulators and firms once
contracts have been negotiated. The effectiveness of regulation is also
impaired by failures to obtain adequate information. Overall
performance, measured in terms of operational and financial variables,
has declined for many utilities since privatisation. The sequencing of
competition, regulation and privatisation matters. Utilities tend to
perform better when the first two elements precede the latter. The
analysis found marked regional differences in awareness and
implementation of regulatory impact assessment (RIA). In general, the
level of awareness and the application of RIA was higher than we
originally anticipated. Unsurprisingly, though, even in countries where
RIA has been adopted in a manner consistent with OECD principles, there
is evidence of inappropriate policy transfer.
Part IV discusses the need for capacity building when dealing with
regulation and competition policy. It stresses the need to move away
from a prescriptive approach towards one focusing on capacity building.
An alternative approach is proposed that uses two diagnostic models,
elaborated through research, to develop 'good partnership' in
capacity building. The approach outlined has been designed to help
regulators answer critical questions in pursuit of developing and
improving regulation. The tools for capacity building have been designed
to support the strategic-level diagnostic models.
The final part of the book addresses issues of regulation and
competition in relation to poverty. The MDGs target to halve the number
of people without sustainable access to safe-drinking water by 2015.
Water is critically important for poverty reduction. The analysis
recognises that more work is needed to discover the best ways to deliver
subsidies in different context.
Regarding poverty and inequality, the book indicates that improved
competition in medium-level technology industries could potentially
reduce the large inequalities in income in developing countries. The
development of infrastructure services (power, water, telecommunication
and transport) contributes to both livelihood promotion and protection
and to economic growth. Whether the privatisation of infrastructure has
benefited the poor is harder to answer since existing research is both
scarce and inconclusive. Privatisation alone is unlikely either to
improve the performance of utilities significantly in the longer term or
to improve access and affordability for the poor without accompanying
competition and regulation and better developed subsidy schemes.
In short, this book is a welcome addition in the literature on
competition, regulation, regulatory governance and poverty, and has
identified areas that warrant further investigation. It has successfully
presented the research carried out at the CRC in a non-technical manner,
which makes it useful for a wide spectrum of readers, collectively
engaged in research, policy and practice.
G. M. Arif
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad.