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Foreign Aid, Clientelism and Democratic Consolidation in Sub-Saharan Africa in the post-transition period : 해외 원조, 후견주의와 민주주의 공고화 전환기 이후 사하라 이남 아프리카를 중심으로

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dc.contributor.advisor백창재-
dc.contributor.author이동일-
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-19T12:08:25Z-
dc.date.available2017-07-19T12:08:25Z-
dc.date.issued2015-02-
dc.identifier.other000000026543-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/134162-
dc.description학위논문 (석사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 정치학과, 2015. 2. 백창재.-
dc.description.abstractThis study aims to understand the impact of foreign aid on democracy in Sub-Saharan Africa in the post-transition period. There is disagreement amongst political scientists about the role of development aid in the democratization of fledgling democracies. It seems that the existing literature on the relationship between foreign aid and democracy has not paid enough attention to political clientelism and its pernicious effects on democratic consolidation in comparative perspective. Politicians in recipient countries have discretion as to how aid is allocated to induce maximum political support from voters. Incumbents offer public investment to local political elites in return for votes. Thus, I put incumbents clientelistic strategy as the key mediating variable between foreign aid and democratic consolidation.
I employ a mixed-methods approach to investigate this relationship, including using theoretical models, quantitative analyses, and historical substantive country-specific approach. The donor-incumbent sequential game and incumbents aid allocation strategy model generates four main hypotheses: (1) foreign aid hampers democratic development in general
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dc.description.abstract(2) economic aid strengthens political incumbents support-
dc.description.abstract(3) democracy aid has no significant impact on political incumbents support-
dc.description.abstractand (4) when the amount of aid gradually decreases, politicians will allocate less and less aid to influence certain leaders than influence uncertain leaders.
In order to empirically investigate hypotheses, I use a two-stage least square analysis (2SLS) approach to take account of the potential for endogeneity. Specifically, it is possible that foreign aid donors may reward recipient countries with more aid where they expect less prevalence of political clientelism
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dc.description.abstractif this is the case there would be a higher likelihood of economic development and democratization. As a result of using this approach, I find that foreign aid as a whole might harm democratic consolidation in Sub-Saharan African countries. More specifically, economic aid may increase the likelihood of incumbents political success whereas democracy aid affects the system in the opposite direction. In summary, I argue that clientelism might be the key variable which links development aid and slow democratic consolidation.
To reveal causal mechanism, I investigate a specific country case: Senegal in Western Africa. In this section, I shed light on the mechanism by which foreign aid influences the extent to which incumbents can maintain political support from voters. In Senegal, incumbent politicians mobilize voters through local political elites. The tradition of clientelistic practices in Senegal dates back to the French colonial era. Politicians provide development projects to local religious leaders in return for the votes. Thus it was inevitable that the ruling party lost political support when the amount of aid gradually decreased during the 1990s. More specifically, they changed aid allocation strategy to maintain a certain level of vote, minimizing involved electoral risk. However it led to the withdrawal of political support from influence certain leaders and the victory of the opposition party in the presidential election in 2000.
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dc.description.tableofcontentsTable of Contents
Chapter I. Introduction 1
1.1. Development aid puzzle 1
1.2. Democratic development in Africa in the post-transition period 2
1.3. Case, methods, and structure of the study 6
Chapter II. Literature Review & Theoretical Framework 9
2.1. Literature review of foreign aid and democracy 9
2.2. Theoretical framework: clientelism as a causal mechanism 10
2.2.1. Definition of clientelism and explaining models 13
2.2.2. Political clientelism in Africa 16
2.2.3. Development aid and incumbents electoral advantage 20
2.2.4. Aid allocation strategies: supply side 24
2.3. Main hypotheses 30
Chapter III. Quantitative Analysis: the Continental Perspective 31
3.1. Research design, model, and data 31
3.2 Aid, democracy, and incumbents support 34
3.2.1. Foreign aid and democracies 34
3.2.2. Foreign aid and vote share of government party 36
3.2.3. Foreign aid and vote share of incumbent president 38
3.3. Results of quantitative analyses 41
Chapter IV. A Case Study: Senegal 47
4.1. The Senegalese presidential election in 2000 47
4.2. Historical origin of clientelism in Senegal 50
4.3. Development aid as a clientelistic resource in Senegal 54
4.4. Incumbents aid allocation strategy and the 2000 presidential election 61
Chapter V. Conclusion 65

References 67
Additional Bibliography 73
Abstract (Korean) 76
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent1712734 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectforeign aid-
dc.subjectclientelism-
dc.subjectdemocratic consolidation-
dc.subjectincumbency advantage-
dc.subjectaid allocation-
dc.subjectSenegal-
dc.subject.ddc320-
dc.titleForeign Aid, Clientelism and Democratic Consolidation in Sub-Saharan Africa in the post-transition period-
dc.title.alternative해외 원조, 후견주의와 민주주의 공고화 전환기 이후 사하라 이남 아프리카를 중심으로-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.description.degreeMaster-
dc.citation.pagesvi, 78-
dc.contributor.affiliation사회과학대학 정치학과-
dc.date.awarded2015-02-
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