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Original Articles

Integrated Governance: A Pre-Requisite for Sustainable Market-Oriented Development in Bangladesh

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Pages 829-851 | Published online: 13 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

Using agriculture input sector as an exemplar, this article assesses Bangladesh's efforts towards a market-oriented development approach. It examines the changing role of the state following the market-based reforms undertaken in this sector and assesses whether the outcomes of the reforms are sustainable. Findings reveal that, although the current move towards a market-oriented approach has led to a shift away from a state-dominated hierarchical structure, it has not been associated with adequate changes in institutional arrangements, safeguards, and regulation. As a result, despite notable achievements of the reforms, the sustainability of these successes is in question. To facilitate participatory, accountable, and sustainable, market-oriented development, the paper proposes an integrated governance model linking state, business, and civil society.

Notes

1The terms networked and integrated governance are used interchangeably in this article.

2The exploratory study had both quantitative and qualitative components investigating the perception of the key stakeholders on the reform policies. A total of 154 surveys were conducted with public officials, private traders dealing with agricultural inputs and farmers. Sixteen semi-structured interviews were conducted with donor agencies and senior bureaucrats involved with reform policies. The sample for public officials and private traders was selected using a stratified random sampling approach. Public officials were selected randomly from three main agricultural institutes among those who were holding mid-level positions and had the experience of working in both the state dominated and privatized agricultural input system. In the case of private traders a total of 16 enterprises/firms dealing in agricultural inputs were selected randomly from the list of input traders obtained from the Ministry of Agriculture, Bangladesh. The respondents were selected randomly from these sixteen enterprises. A total of fifty-four public officials and 43 private traders were surveyed. Farmers were selected using a clustered sampling approach from the Savar Upazilla of Dhaka district. A total of 57 farmers were surveyed.

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