Transcript Powerpoint

THE WORLD BANK’S
DILEMMA
Rule of Law Promotion or Doing
Business
Julio Faundez
University of Warwick
Justice, Power and Law in the Pursuit of Development
Birkbeck College 10 December 2007
Rule of Law(ROL) Promotion
• Today ROL is inevitably linked to
democratic regimes - legal reform in the
perspective of democratization
• But, could also be linked exclusively to
efforts to enable states to reform economic
laws
• Are these objectives incompatible?
Why focus on World Bank?
• It has played a major role in legal and
judicial reform
• It has offered (several) justifications for its
involvement in ROL promotion
• It has played a prominent role steering the
world towards neo-liberal economic
policies.
Objectives of this Presentation
• Trace the evolution of the Bank’s approach to
ROL promotion
• Suggest that the focus on governance and
institutions provide a unique opportunity to
consolidate the role of law in development
• Explain why today the Bank’s ROL activities are
firmly locked within an orthodox interpretation of
the Washington Consensus.
Consequences for ROL
• Bank economists have reaffirmed their
dominance and play a leading role in
determining strategic objectives and content
of ROL promotion
• Objective of comprehensive legal
development in which law plays a variety of
roles has been abandoned
I: Market Friendly Laws
• Objective: to serve as a tool to shift from
state-centred to market-based development
policies
• Emphasis on legal drafting (rules of the
game) and judicial reform to facilitate the
operation of the market.
Mixed Results
• Some positive outcomes – new laws
enacted, awareness of the importance of
judicial independence, improvements in
court administration
• But, several problems:
– Not sensitive to local context
– Top down approach: no local ownership
– Doubts about sustainability.
II: CDF and ROL Promotion
• Comprehensive Development Framework
(CDF) – every aspect of social life is
equally important to achieve development
objectives
• CDF guarantees the place of law in the
development agenda
• But, what is the role of law in development?
Amartya Sen Responds
• Sen validates the Bank’s CDF, albeit with
an emphasis on human freedom
• “Even if law did not contribute an iota to
economic growth, it would still play a
central role in development”
• But, law’s role is not self-evident – Sen asks
Bank to investigate the nature and form of
its role.
III: Governance versus Law
• Bank did not take up Sen’s challenge
• Yet, could not ignore institutions, as they
play a crucial role in determining the fate of
economic reforms
• But, governance agenda soon ran out of
control – so, why not focus on “good
enough governance”?
Redefining Governance
• Good economic outcomes linked to quality of
institutions
• Quality institutions implement sensible economic
policies
• Quality institutions defined in economic terms:
• Property rights and contracts
• Restraints on populist politicians
• Reduction of levels of corruption
Institutional Reform
• Improvements in quality of institutions lead
to improvements in GDP per capita
• Quality of institutions is determined by
quality of the policies – causality is a two
way street
• Institutional reform (including legal reform)
is not always slow.
Reviving One Size Fits All
• Law is critical in determining institutional
quality
• But, avoid Civil Law - Common Law is
more efficient and market-friendly
• If Civil Law cannot be avoided, focus on
simple rules and procedures – do not overregulate and do not suffocate the market
with politics.
Labour Law Reform
• The World Bank (Doing Business) awards
low marks to countries that
– Set minimum wage above 25% of GDP per
capita
– Set maximum workweek below 5.5 days or
below 50 hours a week
– Require advance notice or establish other
procedures to protect workers from arbitrary
sacking.
Why is this advice controversial?
• If countries in Sub-Saharan Africa fix minimum
wages below 25% of GDP p.c. the minimum wage
in most of these countries would be less than one
dollar a day
• Advice is often inconsistent with human rights
standards enshrined in ILO Conventions
• Contradicts the Bank’s objective of empowering
the poor and protecting vulnerable groups.
Conclusion
• CDF as an approach to ROL promotion
offered interesting possibilities
• Bank, however, has abandoned it opting
instead for an orthodox interpretation of the
Washington Consensus that assumes that
most politicians, if not corrupt, are on the
verge of becoming nasty populists.