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Home The Last Word The Last Word Why democracy is “failing” us

Why democracy is “failing” us

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Critics of the government of Uganda accuse it of allocating less money to priority sectors like infrastructure, education and health. Although it is evident that the cost of political patronage and the presidency/first family has grown, it is not true that this has been at the price of budgets of the aforementioned priority sectors.

From 2000/01 to 2010/11, the budgets for key public goods and services sectors have grown as follows: roads from Shs315 billion to Shs1.2 trillion – a 400 percent increase; education from Shs450 billion to Shs1.1 trillion; and health from Shs250 billion to Shs 800 billion. Even accounting for inflation, this is a remarkable achievement.

However, as most Ugandans would attest, our roads are full of potholes while our public schools and hospitals are collapsing under the weight of disrepair and congestion. There are shortages of drugs, equipment and basic things like gloves in hospital. Our schools lack textbooks and lab equipment. Public health and education systems are characterised by absenteeism and apathy among nurses, doctors, pupils and teachers.

A 2007 government study found that teachers are in class for only 18 percent of the time while 76 percent of those who enrol for the Universal Primary Education never finish Primary Seven. Infant mortality rates have not improved in ten years. Morbidity rates are almost as high in the southwest Uganda (where our rulers come from) as in Internally Displaced People’s camps in the north. Clearly, there is a big disjunction between money spent and the goods and services delivered.

Therefore, the problem is not that the government does not prioritise public goods and services. Rather, it is that we are not getting value for money. Why is this so? One obvious explanation is corruption. But this should be puzzling given that Uganda has many anti-corruption bodies that are active and activist in their work.

An outsider visiting Uganda would be impressed by the work of the Inspector General of Government, PPDA, parliament, a vigilant press and commissions of inquiry. Public officials are routinely humiliated before oversight committees of parliament and in the media. Arrests, detentions and prosecutions are commonplace except for the very powerful.

Critics argue that institutionalised corruption and incompetence in public service delivery is due to lack of “genuine” democracy (whatever this means). Yet Uganda punches above its weight in many indicators of democracy except for the length of tenure of the president. Our checks and balances are above what our per capita income would predict. For instance, Uganda has a strong anti-incumbency bias; in 2006, 63 percent of MPs lost their seats compared to the US where only 10% did.

But a section of the intellectual and political class in Uganda (and Africa generally) is too lazy to puzzle over this paradox: That there is high voter vigilance yet the performance of the public sector is extremely poor. In the West, democracy promotes public goods and services delivery. However, the peculiar way democracy has evolved under NRM seems to undermine the public good. Why?

Electoral competition is an important aspect of democracy; but it takes place in a specific context. Our politicians compete for votes in the context of a large peasantry (70 percent), a small private sector and a very small educated middleclass. What incentives does this context create on those who seek our votes?

Our politicians can win support by delivering public goods and services to ordinary people. This demands that they build political institutions that can ensure an impersonal application of public policy. But they can also win votes by distributing private goods and services (alcohol, sugar, soap, salt and pay school fees and pick medical bills) “personalistically” to individuals and groups whose support they need.

Delivering public goods and services is costly; imagine the time it takes and the money it costs to build a road to Pader or a school in Kanungu. Giving voters sugar and soap is cheaper and can be done in two weeks. So politicians will be inclined to give voters alcohol than build for them hospitals. Yet politicians in the West promise and deliver public services? Why?

In western democracies, the average voter has completed secondary school, lives in a house with running water, electricity, a fridge, television, possibly owns a car etc. What would a voter with such a profile seek from a candidate? It seems obvious that she would demand better and accessible healthcare and education and better roads.

The average voter in Uganda possibly dropped out of school after Primary Four, lives in a mud and wattle house in a rural village, has no idea what a functioning public healthcare system looks like and does not know her rights. She has no access to clean water, gets two poor quality meals a day, has not eaten meat in two months, buys clothes once every four months, soap is a cumbersome expense on her budget and buys sugar only for Christmas and Easter.

Therefore, her most immediate and pressing needs are food and clothing. So when a politician running for office turns up with sugar, meat and a blanket, he is addressing her existential dilemma. The one who promises a functional healthcare system is addressing an important concern in her life. But it is at best secondary.

Politicians running for office face incentives that force them to behave in particular ways depending on the profile of the median voter. That is why politicians seeking to serve the common good have progressively been eliminated at every election. The reason is simple: In the battle between the crook that has sold his house in Kampala and used the proceeds to buy alcohol for voters, meat and sugar and the public spirited guy who promises roads and hospitals, the crook has an advantage.

Debate on the delivery of public goods and services therefore has to focus on how to change the structure of electoral competition in ways that minimise the incentives of politicians to prioritise private goods over public goods. I do not have all the answers. But that is where the debate should begin. However, so far the debate in Uganda is disarticulated from this reality of our politics.

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Comments (29)Add Comment
Don't blame competitive democracy blame co-optation
written by Ocheto, July 20, 2010
I wouldn’t call the democracy taking place now competitive. But rather it is co-optative, where a majority, movement, NRM party has corruptibly co-opted a large swath of the electorate to join serve its power interests. There is little debate or competition for ideas or votes outside the movement much less inside it. For the democracy to be genuine i.e. competitive there has to be a multiparty arrangement with a real possibility of power changing hands between the contending groups or parties. The biggest blow to genuine (competitive) democracy was when the presidential term limits were eliminated.
Don't blame competitive democracy blame co-optation
written by Ocheto, July 20, 2010
Right now elections have no real consequential possibilities. It is more of the same. Instead of a corrosive skepticism the electorate has grown cynical because they know there is no chance for real change for the better. If an incumbent party stood a chance of being replaced then a possibility of positive change would be real. The challenge is to make play for political power truly competitive rather than co-optative. The current arrangement is all backwards serves the interests of the rulers, when it should be the other around, i.e., the rulers serving the interests of the electorate.
...
written by Mafta Mingi, July 21, 2010
Uganda is unique and the only one in the world after Somalia collapsed , MPs are surpported by NRM and represent m7 in paliarment not the people . Being an MP now looks like an employment opportunity MPs are many and not good for purpose ,in effect they are parasites sucking on the meagre resources of a poor state , m7's political elitism is now leading to the collapse of the state ,the US and all partners must know . It will be a miracle if Uganda ever survives as a state the death of the dictator which is now more eminent than before ! You cant try to build a broken up Somalia while creating another one , the US and UK must know others dont mind
Mwenda wrong. Thx Ocheto
written by Edgar, July 21, 2010
Ocheto, I cannot agree with you more. Mwenda missed a great point by just concentrating on symptoms and in so doing; he came up with a farfetched solution of how to tackle the problem. Many voters, whether educated or not, know that no real change can occur by just an MP in a parliament of a country whose President has been in power for 24 yrs. Any debate to achieve democracy in Uganda should start from fixing the presidential term limits. That’s, I believe, is the only way forward to curtail Museveni’s and his co-option agenda aided by clientelism and patrimonialism, to attaining any real change
Decolonising the African Mind (a must read)
written by Bob Kabaziguruka, July 21, 2010
That is just your inferionty complex to think that those in the west are more rational. If it was all about sugar and salt, why then do we have the kiboko squad, kalangala and all these other para militaries. These bandits are more active in the rural areas than in towns where according to you, sugar, soap etc is all you need to win an election.
and its not necessarily about education levels. all of a sudden you begin chanting praises for museveni and kagame. have you forgotten what a functioning health care system looks like?
No value addition to Independence
written by Lakwena, July 22, 2010
Andrew calls it value for money. But we don't value anything including our lives. So we add value to nothing. If we do anything, it is superficial. But we are very good at adding problems into/onto whatever we get involved in. We have not added any value to our independence. And there is noway we can add value to democracy. A simple example; after 48 years of independence we have not built a single new Police Station in Kampala: We are stuck with smelly, CPS, Kawempe, Kibuye, Old Kampala and Wandegeya. And Museveni is obsessed with selling away the Police Barracks and Prison facilities. He now wants to give- read sell Kirinya Prison to Malaysian Investors. That his value addition and Democracy.
Budget maintenance an achievement?
written by Omeros, July 22, 2010
"Even accounting for inflation, this is a remarkable achievement." I don't see that there is anything much impressive in running significant budget deficits and simply looking to donor aid to plug a gaping fiscal deficit caused by increased public expenditure (on non-tradables) amid only modestly growing tax revenues. Anybody, given someone else's money and a cheque book, can spend with abandon. The question is, how will the government confront the fiscal crisis that will arise when it can no longer rely on donor pledges being maintained at their current level - infrastructure bonds? Do you trust in the solvency of a Uganda government shorn of donor funding?
Why the puzzlement?
written by Omeros, July 22, 2010
"One obvious explanation is corruption. But this should be puzzling given that Uganda has many anti-corruption bodies that are active and activist in their work." It is not that puzzling since, as well you know, Andrew, the matter of who comes to be prosecuted or censured by the anti-corruption outfits is governed by political considerations and not on the impartial recommendation of public prosecutors. The failure to pursue, still less to punish, the powerful engenders a culture of impunity at the very top of government. That sense of impunity corrodes the democratic principle of open and transparent government which in turn undermines service delivery.
Genuine democracy
written by Omeros, July 22, 2010
""genuine” democracy (whatever this means)" I think that we can look to the observance of particular rule of law concepts as determinative of whether or not full democracy exists. I would proffer (i) the separation of powers and (ii) equality before the law as two such basic principles sadly absent from Uganda. Any pretence that the executive had to observing the limits of its powers was laid to rest when the courts of judicature were stormed by armed security operatives TWICE. The failure to prosecute the powerful, even where there is compelling evidence of their wrongdoing, points to an absence of equality before the law. Which is why the Democracy Index has Uganda down as a mere 'hybrid democracy' (which is not kindly meant).
Lazy intellectuals
written by Omeros, July 22, 2010
"But a section of the intellectual and political class in Uganda (and Africa generally) is too lazy to puzzle over this paradox: That there is high voter vigilance yet the performance of the public sector is extremely poor." There is an interesting discussion paper prepared by Ferraz and Finan at Berkeley in 2005 in which the authors study the incidence of corruption in local government in Brazil from random federal audits of the municipalities. They found that first term mayors generally extracted less rents than second term mayors (there is a two term limit) because, they suggested, a reputation for not tolerating corruption would get first termers re-elected.
Lazy intellectuals ctd.
written by Omeros, July 22, 2010
Second term mayors were generally more corrupt but better administrators than first termers. However, even in the case of lame duck mayors corruption was never unbridled since the lame duck had an interest in preserving a well administered mayoralty for a potential successor of his/her party. As Ocheto rightly observes, the absence of term limits in Uganda's constitution removes all such re-election incentives. Political corruption and its product, poor service delivery, will therefore always thrive where there is a strong sense that, anti-incumbency bias notwithstanding, elections can be "managed" to produce a result favourable to an incumbent who is not subject to term limits.
Poor showing
written by Abasa, July 22, 2010
I am an ardent admirer of Andrew’s analysis, but I worry this one is very poor. You totally missed the point big time. If any policy followed your recommendation to achieve "real democracy" in Uganda, I attest they wouldn't achieve much, if not nothing. Anyhow, you are a good writer and the fact that you write on different issues everything week, you are likely to get a few wrong like you have done. Any one does it & it’s human. So I excuse you even if this was poor. You get so many right.
federalism is only cure of royal presidencies
written by Amos Otafiire, July 22, 2010
"Delivering public goods and services is costly; imagine the time it takes and the money it costs to build a road to Pader or a school in Kanungu."

Try federalism and see how easy and cheap such things are! That's why the Mwendas of this world will not venture in analyzing because there is nothing in for them. Baliiramu wa?
what are the issues?
written by charles, July 22, 2010
The recent bombing of Ugandans in Kampala? Do Ugandans think that is a political issue? To what extent will that shape the elections resutls next year?
How about bloodshed on the streets of Kampala last year? Do the Ugandan voters consider that a political issues? How about the MPs who gave Yoweri Museveni a "standing ovation" after his troops had stormed Kampala and shed inocent blood against Nkoba za Mbogo? Will that shape the results of the next elections?
Who is shaping public opinion in Uganda?
Andrew, are you in a position to give us a real analysis of the principle factors that influence governance in Uganda? It is not a democratic state. The state rules the people. The people are not self-govening.
Do you recall "Not Yet Uhuru"?
We Ugandans are "failing" democracy
written by Russo, July 23, 2010
Democracy is not failing us Andrew! We are "failing" democracy! Independence fore fathers and multiparty democracy pace-setters practised/crafted crookery in the voting campaigns.Salt, sugar, waragi, started early days of UPC and NRM added salt to injury. The vast majority of electorate maybe unlearned, elites behave in the manner think of this and add to this the negative listless issues we face as a nation, partisan institutions, local govts, weak ECs. If we had an EC that is autonomous and self respecting from outset we would probably have not betrayed democracy. Remember the vote-seekers come from the same background and have been benefactors before.
"Ankoleism" or "Westernism" has failed Uganda!
written by OJA, July 23, 2010
Uganda has not failed because of democracy but because of Ankoleism or westernism. Salim Saleh (Junk helicopters), Muhwezi (GAVI), Mbabazi (NSSF Land), Otafiire (Congo plunder), Sam Kutesa (Entebbe Airport, CHOGM, etc), Bukenya Gilbert (Chogm so "Bugandaism"). I don't want to talk about number one because it is self-evident. If the head is an Ankole and majority of the terrible thieves and thugs of Uganda's coffers are Westerners or from Buganda, then they are the ones who have failed Uganda. Nobody wants to hear about numerous anti-corruption establishments. If these are not fought but a small man in Arua who steals chicken is taken to jail to spend a year, instead of a mass-murderer who "eats" away Malaria, TB, AIDs money, Uganda is dead! The truth pains!
For Ocheto and Omeros
written by Andrew Mwenda, July 25, 2010
I find your arguments begging the question. for example, why should museveni put in place a compatitive system that can cause him to lose power? why should he ensure equality before the law - which will cause his allies to go to jail? why should he limit his time in office if he can afford to stay indefinately? let us analyse, not moralise. democracy is not an ultruistic objective by a ruler. it is a product of political contestation. that contest takes place in a given context. the context creates incentives for actors in the game.
Africa's Problems
written by Joseph, July 26, 2010
As was correctly put by one writer in the Saturday Monitor, the Real Problems of Africa have gathered in Kampala to discuss the African problems.
The Paradox of Democracy: the Ruled are also the Rulers
written by Ocheto, July 26, 2010
The paradox of democracy: the ruled are also the rulers. Andrew what you are describing isn’t liberal competitive democracy: “the power of the people, by the people, and for the people”, Abraham Lincoln. So if what you are alluding to isn’t democracy, how could it be faulted? Each time Ugandans try, make one step forward (e.g. write a constitution), they take two steps backwards (e.g. change the constitution by eliminating presidential term limits). Democracy is a contract between the people (the ruled) and the (temporary) rulers. The people, being the superior agent, the superstructure, own the power, which they temporarily lend to the rulers subject to their review and reversal.
The Paradox of Democracy: the Ruled are also the Rulers
written by Ocheto, July 26, 2010
The people write the constitution that defines the rules and the procedures on how they are to be governed. The executive, the parliament and the judiciary are all subordinate to the people, the superstructure. Museveni ‘s interest is to stay in power as long as he can but the people’s interest in the long run isn’t going to be served by an autocracy, however well intentioned. Moreover the point of having term limits is not to have the temporary rulers work well to be reelected, but rather more importantly to ensure that they make rules that they too will live under, so that everybody is truly, in reality, equal under the law.
Andrew This is why
written by Ggomba, July 26, 2010
written by Ggomba, July 26, 2010

SAMPLES OF ALTERED VOTES, 2006 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS.
Station=Ajepeti Coop. Union
1. Besigye

Counted: 446

Declared by EC: 4
2. Museveni

Counted:70

Declared by EC: 70

Station=Mugiti Trading Centre
1. Besigye

Counted:194

Declared by EC:194
2. Museveni

Counted:156

Declared by EC:256

Station=Kesesira P.Sch.
1. Besigye

Counted:621

Declared by EC:33
2. Museveni

Counted:321

Declared by EC:455

Station=Kisaasi P. Sch, West Mengo ground
1. Besigye

Counted:317

Declared by EC:0
2. Museveni

Counted:124

Declared by EC:124

Chistopher Muwanga,
Nakasero,
Nampala.

for ocheto
written by Andrew Mwenda, July 27, 2010
Ocheto, you are stating the ideal, not the practical. even under abraham lincon, democracy in america was for rich white men. blacks, hispanics, native americans and women were not among "the people" whom democracy was supposed to serve. anyway, for a constitution to work, it must be self enforcing i.e. there must be sufficient incentives for rulers to honor/respect the articles of the constitution and sufficient and credible threats to them if they violated the constitution. do we have that in Uganda? that is the question. there rest is positive morality.
Low maturity of citizenry
written by Kalmoh, July 27, 2010
Andrew, in Darkness at Noon Arthur Koestler says that, "the success or failure of any social movement depends on "the relative maturity of the masses" which lies in "the capacity to recognise their own interests". Peasant participation in our democracy is a symptom of low levels of relative maturity of the citizenry... We now have to place our hopes in the middle class to think for the masses - after all they have more to lose and gain in politics (jobs, health, education) which matters most in the daily lives of citizens.
For Andrew
written by Omeros, July 27, 2010
I don't see that my comments do beg any question (at least not in the formal, logical sense that my premises entail my conclusions) nor do they involve an appeal to any morality. I simply propose that a presidential term limit is a good place to start because of the clear incentive it provides to a leader to govern with a modicum of responsibility, if not for the sake of his of own re-election, then for that of his party. Term-limited, a leader still has a hand to steal, but the need to earn re-election tempers the theft and spurs the leader into delivering services which ultimately is the means of his survival.
Andres
written by Omeros, July 27, 2010
I'd wager that Ugandans would vote for a president who, like the campaign slogan of one Sao Paolo gubernatorial candidate, steals but gets things done. But there is little hope of a president of even that colour if the re-election incentive simply does not exist.
Andre
written by Omeros, July 27, 2010
If your argument considers the issue of the term limit to be yesterday's battle lost, I'd like to know what practical reforms might stand a better (or indeed any) chance of success in the face of a leader with a jealous grasp on his power, no altruism in his heart and an overwhelming (if ill-gotten) parliamentary majority to call upon - the political context in which the Ugandan opposition operates. I ask your very own questions of you. What democratic reforms - necessarily arrangements that cause an authoritarian a loss of his all-important political authority - would a leader in the position of Museveni be likely to countenance? How does your analysis approach that question?
Democracy is achieved progressively: African leadership is still irrational
written by Ocheto, July 27, 2010
Exactly the point I was trying to make. Democracy is not ideal; it’s realized through incremental steps. Rational American liberal capitalist democracy was realized progressively, and it is still improving. But that can’t be said of Uganda were Museveni is doing all he can to keep Uganda backwards, being beholden to his (violent) personal and tribal whims. True, earlier, America didn’t have universal suffrage, but it didn’t have the burdens of impassioned, irrational, tribal politics, either, which keeps African nations trapped in violent/war politics.
...
written by Ocheto, July 27, 2010
All African people have the power to vote their rulers out, and if their rulers won’t vacate office, backward tribal violence is inevitable. And if that isn’t an incentive then leaders in Africa are offering inferior leadership, and thus condemning themselves and their societies to lag i.e. , continue taking orders from stronger democracies (e.g. Museveni being a client of the US in Somalia).
Uganda is democratic at lower level anyways, but it’s at the higher levels where it is unable to operate outside irrational tribal, violent methods.
Omeros and Andrew
written by Dun, August 27, 2010
If the need to earn re-election tempers the theft and spurs the leader into delivering services which ultimately is the means of his survival, and you both believe it, then it's emotions that probably prevent one from understanding the other
You honestly cannot beg a leader to tame him own powers; force him to. Fine the term limits were scrapped from the constitution; organise a coordinated campaign against Museveni, present a better candidate and see if he's not defeated. You only need to be smarter. One thing for sure is that Museveni has not found his match; the Besigye's are really gamblers.

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Ocheto Says:
2012-02-08 00:43:52
The solution to Uganda’s problem is the overthrow of Museveni's current government. It has made a mockery of the democratic wishes and aspirations of Ugandans. It is has been in power too long, but

rita Says:
2012-02-08 16:38:02
Thank u Jesus for what you have just done and you too UNEB

 
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