The institutional basis of economic failure: anatomy of the segmented business system*
- 20 October 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Socio-Economic Review
- Vol. 4 (2) , 239-277
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ser/mwj034
Abstract
There has been a glaring lack of research on institutional configurations, which impede rather than promote economic success. Building on Richard Whitley's business systems theory and based on the experience of East Africa, this paper attempts to fill a gap in the literature by identifying a distinct variety of capitalism, the segmented business system. Segmented business systems are characterized by rigid internal divisions between different areas of economic activity. The relative impermeability of barriers between the latter partially accounts for their weak track record; this is mitigated—but, in some cases, exacerbated—through the operation of informal networks of support. Whilst segmented business systems would seem to be characterized by consistent institutional failure, specific aspects thereof have proved highly functional to elite interests. However, given their vulnerability to external and internal pressures, segmented business systems are likely to remain locked in a cycle of generally poor and uneven economic performance in the absence of radical reforms.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Trust, Intrafirm, and Supplier RelationsBusiness and Society Review, 2005
- The making of an African success story: The privatization of Kenya AirwaysThunderbird International Business Review, 2005
- Explaining Slow Growth in AfricaAfrican Development Review, 2002
- Economic Reform, Private Sector Development, and the Business Environment in Viet NamComparative Economic Studies, 2000
- An Overview of the Performance of the East African Economies since 1985: Implications for the New Initiative on East African Co-operationAfrican Sociological Review, 2000
- Causes and consequences of corruption: Mozambique in transitionCommonwealth & Comparative Politics, 1999
- Why structural adjustment is necessary and why it doesn't workPublished by Berghahn Books ,1994
- Commentary: states, markets and Africa's crisisReview of African Political Economy, 1994
- Beyond Capitalism and Socialism in AfricaThe Journal of Modern African Studies, 1988
- Patrons, Clients, and Factions: New Dimensions of Conflict Analysis in AfricaCanadian Journal Of Political Science-Revue Canadienne De Science Politique, 1972