Date: 2012
Type: Book
State Reform and Development in the Middle East: Turkey and Egypt in the post-liberalization era
London, Routledge, 2012, Routledge Studies in Middle Eastern Economies
ADLY, Amr, State Reform and Development in the Middle East: Turkey and Egypt in the post-liberalization era, London, Routledge, 2012, Routledge Studies in Middle Eastern Economies
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/24676
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
The economies of Turkey and Egypt, remarkably similar until the early 1980s, have since taken divergent paths. Turkey has successfully implemented a policy of export led industrialisation whilst Egypt’s manufacturing industry and exports have stagnated. In this book, Amr Adly uses extensive primary research to present detailed comparisons of Turkey’s and Egypt’s state administrative and private sector capacities and links between the two. The conclusion the author draws is that the external contexts for both were so alike that this cannot account for their diverging paths. Instead, the author suggests a counterintuitive yet compelling explanation; that a democratic polity is far more likely than an authoritarian one to engender a successful developmental state. Emerging in the wake of the January revolution in Egypt, when hopes for democratisation were raised, this book provides a fresh perspective on the topical subject of state reform and development in the Middle East and will be of interest to students and scholar alike.
Table of Contents:
-- Introduction
-- 1. Why does State Reform vary among Developing Countries?
-- 2. Escort States and Export Restructuring
-- 3. What Happened in Turkey (1983-2010)?
-- 4. Mission Unaccomplished: Egypt (1990-2010)
-- 5. Whence come State Reform?
-- 6. Political Competition and Institutional Reform
-- 7. Revenue-Bases and State Reform
-- 8. Pathways to Export-Lled Growth: ISI Institutional Legacy and State Reform
-- 9. External Factors and State Reform
-- 10. The End of a Non-Developmental Regime: Mubarak’s Decline and Fall (2004-2011)
-- 11. Concluding Remarks
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/24676
ISBN: 9780415624190
Publisher: Routledge
Initial version: http://hdl.handle.net/1814/14704
Version: Published version of EUI PhD thesis, 2010