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“ADRESSING THE CHALLENGE OF GOOD GOVERNANCE” KICHR, Sudan 18 & 19/12/06 Nicos Kalatzis Research Associate -Themistokles & Dimitris Tsatsos Foundation & Expert on Social Policy-The Hellenic Ministry of Economy & Finance ‘Timing’ global focus on ‘G’ • NATIONAL ISSUE:-90’s : International ‘No competency’ • AWARENCE: 94-97 World Bank: SRSs - Corruption (+11% on G loans) • MONITORING:2000‘G’ monitoring... assesment World Bank Definition for G • “Governance is a policy producing system, characterized by predictable and transparent processes, a bureaucracy permeated by professional ethos, an executive government sector responsible for its acts and a strong civil society participating to public affairs, as well as by the fact that all of the above happen on the basis of the State of law”. UN Definition for G • “Governance is a process through which institutions, corporations and citizen’s groups organize their interests, exercise their rights and obligations and mediate their differences”. Goverment and Governance (G) • Goverment = control, ultimately impose coersion, • G= steering, because achieving public goods via coordinating, mediating, mobilizing, co-shaping Goverment and G (con.) • Govermement as sole competency of politicoadministrative structures, state’s sovereign will • G cooperation among different governmental and non-governmental actors with diverse interests. (state, market, civil society) Directions for Administrative Reform 90s and 00s• -mid80’s: introducing market logic and marketmaking policies • -mid 90’s: G non legally (but costly)binding instruments 1.steer, guide coprorate and civic actors action plans • 1.New Public Management (NAP on poverty), 2. (MBO - TQM) Open method of • 2. ‘quasi-market’ & coordination , Privatisation benchmarking(on socioeconomic governance), Why adress G? Driving Forces • Spectacular increase of financial flows to non developped Countries • Un-effectiveness of development assistance (importsubsituting) • epistemic shift: ‘institutional economics’ and ‘democratic theory’ ‘Mapping’ major international initiatives on G • W.B. ‘leading role’: from awareness to 1.‘horizontal’ expertise on Local G and post-crisis & • 2.monitoring: Indicators • UNDP- DAC/OECD ‘Join Forces’: 1.‘tailor-made’ G strategies • 2.2005 ‘Initiative on Good G in the Arab Countries’ Commitment of the African Countries World Bank G Indicators • Objective: ‘Ranking’ through unified indicators • Coverage: 200 countries • Variables: 350 objective/estimations • diffused and Widely used by international public and corporate organizations World Bank Indicators ‘Clusters’ • 6 areas of G: Expression of opinion and accountability Political stability and absence of major violence and terrorism Existence of criteria for the measurement of the efficiency of government... World Bank Indicators Clusters The existence of a system ensuring legislative and regulatory quality The guarantee of the effective function of the state of law, and The existence of institutionalized and exercised controls for corruption. G INDICATOR’S (MIS)USE • Enough Transparency and long-term Comparability? • GDP- G ‘Econometric Fallacy’? • How correlate judgemental VS objective ones? • Rating as ‘De facto’ assesment? Are there altentatives? • UNDP ‘Oslo Programme’ : ‘core’ & ‘satellite’ pro-poor and gender • ‘METAGORA project’ E.U. sponsored, Oslo G Center + Indian Council+ E.U. M-C: local statistical authorities for national prioritization