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Gambling on Development

Why Some Countries Win and Others Lose

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Gambling on Development

By: Stefan Dercon
Narrated by: Michael Langan
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About this listen

In the last thirty years, the developing world has undergone tremendous changes. Overall, poverty has fallen, people live longer and healthier lives, and economies have been transformed. And yet many countries have simply missed the boat. Why have some countries prospered, while others have failed?

Stefan Dercon argues that the answer lies not in a specific set of policies, but rather in a key "development bargain," whereby a country's elites shift from protecting their own positions to gambling on a growth-based future. Despite the imperfections of such bargains, China is among the most striking recent success stories, along with Indonesia, and more unlikely places, such as Bangladesh, Ghana, and Ethiopia. Gambling on Development is about these winning efforts, in contrast to countries stuck in elite bargains leading nowhere.

Building on three decades' experience across forty-odd countries, Dercon winds his narrative through Ebola in Sierra Leone, scandals in Malawi, beer factories in the DRC, mobile phone licenses in Mozambique, and relief programs behind enemy lines in South Sudan. Weaving together conversations with prime ministers, civil servants, and ordinary people, this is a probing look at how development has been achieved across the world, and how to assist such successes.

©2022 Stefan Dercon (P)2023 Tantor
Business Development International Business Imperialism
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Excellent book - poorly read

This is an excellent exploration of the interface between politics and development at the individual country level. Through numerous animal-themed case studies, it draws attention to the importance of a county aligning internal political settlement ('elite bargain') with development objectives. I really did not get on with the reading performance. The mannered whispering of words in parenthesis is irritating and the mispronunciations are jarring.

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