Cover image for State-owned enterprises in Africa and the economics of public service delivery
State-owned enterprises in Africa and the economics of public service delivery
Title:
State-owned enterprises in Africa and the economics of public service delivery
Author:
Netswera, Fulufhelo Godfrey, editor, contributor.
ISBN:
9781776342389

9781776342372
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xxv, 261 pages) : illustrations (chiefly colour)
General Note:
Available through AOSIS Scholarly Books.
Contents:
State-owned enterprises and public service delivery in Africa / Post-colonial public administration systems : lessons from Uganda / Corruption, bureaucracy and export orientation of firms in Africa / Enterprise dynamics and employment creation in Africa / Pillars supporting corruption in procurement practices : a case of non-public-serving state ownership enterprises / Counting the cost of state-owned enterprises failure in South Africa : post-apartheid betrayals or mere inefficiency? / Corruption, citizen participation and service delivery in Nigeria and Mauritius / Procurement, corruption and service delivery in state-owned enterprises in South Africa / Procurement, corruption and service delivery in the Ghanaian public sector / Public service delivery procurement and the economics of the state-owned enterprises in Tanzania / Public service delivery and human development in Nigeria : a litany of woes / Good governance through public service quality : an empirical study from India / The future of state-owned enterprises in Africa
Abstract:
"This book intends to provide a continuous assessment of the crisis in governance in Africa. As it is, there are huge deficits in the capacity of African states to harness vast human and material resources to promote good governance. This manifests in pervasive corruption, collapsed service delivery, collapsed state-owned enterprises, eroded social trust, capital flight, escalating levels of poverty and wars, human insecurity, and stunted growth. The public sector is the pulse of service delivery because the entire governance system revolves around the sourcing of materials and services, mostly from the private sector, in order to achieve its public policy intents. The procurement process, therefore, ordinarily ought to yield positive economic outcomes and an efficiency-driven system in favour of the government itself and its service recipients. However, this more often than not is not the case. Despite its enormous wealth, the African continent is in an economic quagmire, a dilemma that requires multi-facet research activities. This is the motivation for this book."-- Publisher's description.
Added Corporate Author:
Holds: Copies: