D+C Development and Cooperation (No. 1, January/february
2002, p. 8-11)

Neo-Patrimonial Rule
Transition to Democracy has not Succeeded
Gero Erdmann

Democratic transition has been successful in only a few countries
in sub-Saharan Africa. In most countries a mixed system prevails, which
has prevented the beginnings of a rational and legal administration
asserting themselves against continuing patrimonial power structures.
Decisions are taken not on the basis of institutionalised rules, but
in favour of personal relationships and to personal advantage. Elections
serve a bogus democratic legitimation, and the new rulers take over
power structures practically without change. Gero Erdmann therefore
views the assertion of rational-legal administration and legal systems
as the most important precondition for Africas development.
There is widespread disillusionment over democratisation in Africa.
It goes as far as Afro-pessimism, which, however, is based on unrealistically
high expectations and yardsticks. However, the fact is that in Africa
very few clearly successful democratic transitions exist. Many of these
processes are in the twilight zone, in the grey world between democracy
and dictatorship.

Interim balance
of democratisation
On the one hand, it can be seen that a democratic transition has in
fact taken place in certain countries: the constitution has been democraticised,
and founding elections have been held and resulted in a change of government.
But it is also clear that an interaction immediately comes into play
in which political freedoms are temporarily restricted and then observed
again, so that we generally see more or less free elections once the
first legislative period expires. An open return to authoritarianism
rarely occurs: no amendment to the constitution, no military coup. The
gradual changes are enacted by the democratically elected government.
A change of regime the other way round, from democracy to dictatorship,
is difficult to capture..
On the other hand, there are cases in which authoritarian regimes were
compelled to amend the constitution and hold elections under democratic
conditions, but the old government remained in power because the opposition
was split up. At the same time, exercise of power is not free from human
rights violations. Classifying that as democracy appears to be impossible.
Certain democratic progress was in fact achieved by constitutional reforms,
but far from asserted in political practice. Transition has not been
completed neither in one direction nor the other. In constitutional
terms, a democracy is in place, but no-one wants to call it that.
In both examples the transition process has come to a standstill and
jelled into a type of hybrid regime. This is located between
dictatorship and democracy and fluctuates between the two poles, with
basic human rights sometimes being observed and sometimes not. For the
African context, I describe this kind of rule (a sub-type of the hybrid
regime) as a neo-patrimonial multi-party system.
The hybrid regime has in common with democracy the fact that its access
to power and its legitimation is ensured by free elections. Meanwhile,
the remaining civil and political human rights are not always observed
and not in the same way. Human rights violations are frequent, even
if not in grave or systematic ways. The decisive criteria for identifying
dictatorships is that no free elections take place in them and human
rights are violated in continual and systematic form.
I aim to show that there is a common and systematic reason for the
few successful transitions and the existence of the many hybrid regimes
in Africa, namely the predominance of neo-patrimonial systems.
In contrast to many more pessimistic observers, I postulate that in
the past decade in Africa considerable political changes accompanied
the democratisation movements. To be sure, these have not led to flourishing
democracy. But in many African countries there is now better protection
of fundamental human rights as well as political participation and civil
rights. Opposition groups now have quite different opportunities than
those that obtained up to the mid-1980s to make themselves heard and
survive both politically and physically. This means that substantially
better conditions are in place for all the political forces which wish
to deepen democracy in the sense of political and social participation.
The changes can be seen, if only very roughly, in the situation of
political and civil rights in many African countries, as summarised
in the annual Freedom House Index. According to the index the number
of regimes classified as not-free has declined markedly,
almost halving. By contrast, the number of partly free regimes
and in particular those classified as free has clearly increased.
The free countries are Benin, Botswana, Cape Verde, Mali,
Mauritius, Namibia, Sao Tomé and Principe, and South Africa.
However, only five or six of these eight lands can be seen as young
transition countries. Botswana and Mauritius have been regarded as democratic
since the 1970s, and South Africa, without doubt a transition country,
is a special case within Africa. So of the more than 30 attempts to
democratise the political system since the beginning of the 1990s only
five can be seen as successful. The rest are obviously, as described,
in an ongoing transitional situation or they have lapsed back
into dictatorship.

Peculiarities of
African transition
Only a few political scientists dealing with African studies who have
tackled research on transition have pointed out its special institutional
conditions in Africa. These conditions mean that transitions there take
place on the basis of neo-patrimonial regimes. A peculiarity of this
kind of transition is that in most cases it is triggered by mass political
protests or at least is accompanied by them.
In principle, four varieties of authoritarian regimes in Africa can
be differentiated for the period before 1989/90:
1. Military oligarchies;
2. Plebiscitary one-party systems;
3. Competitive one-party systems; and
4. Settler oligarchies.

Neo-patrimonialism
A precise definition of the term is not at hand. The simplest way to
define neo-patrimonialism is to compare it with Max Webers term
patrimonialism. He used it to describe a system of rule
based on administrative and military personnel who were responsible
only to the ruler. Neo-patrimonialism, which is a modern form of the
traditional patrimonial form of rule, is a mixed system. Here, elements
of patrimonial and rational-bureaucratic rule co-exist and are sometimes
interwoven.
In a patrimonial system, all ruling relationships, both political and
administrative, are personal relationships. There is no difference between
the private and public spheres. By contrast, under a neo-patrimonial
system the differentiation of private and public is recognised (at least
formally), and therefore it can be referred to publicly. In practice,
however, the private and public spheres often are not separated. That
means two systems, the patrimonial system of personal relationships
and the legal-rational one of the bureaucracy, exist side-by-side. De
facto, however, that is not so because the patrimonial system penetrates
the legal-rational one and deforms the logic of its functions.
Part of the patrimonial side of neo-patrimonialism is clientelism,
which develops into extended networks of political clients. Political
clientelism is about exchanging or arranging certain services and/or
resources in return for political support, such as votes.
Unlike patrimonial-type clientelism, neo-patrimonialism focuses less
on direct exchanges between patron and client and more on the arrangement
of services and resources. Most of the exchanges are not in the patrons
own private possession, that is, they are not directly reciprocal. He
transfers public goods and/or resources. Clientelism can be based on
family relationships, but also exists without such links. It can be
connected with traditional social relationships, but should be understood
as a modern phenomenon.

Clientelism as a safeguard
against insecurity
In the African context, it is significant that client relationships
are comparatively unstable. Clientelism here is understood as a strategy
to secure protection and achieve objectives in order to overcome ongoing
insecurity in the social context which exists due to unpredictable state
institutions and politics. For its part, this strategy contributes directly
to reproduction of this insecurity if largely general and competing
recourse is made to the clientele strategy. It can be successful only
if uncertainty over the behaviour of the state institutions continues.
With respect to business and development under such rule, one can say
only that public office is used to accumulate private wealth by means
of informal privatisation. Political power is the basis of economic
power. This means that income from rents is of central importance. The
market is nullified or purposefully steered, sometimes by administrative
instruments, sometimes by private, informal means. Political
office serves not only to secure rent income. Control over the steering
of this income is of central importance for retaining political power.
The result of the neo-patrimonialising of the state was finally the
wrecking of its own structures. This was expressed from the beginning
of the 1980s by various labels such as weak or soft
state or lame Leviathan.
In the background was the ongoing crisis of the African economies from
the end of the 1970s, and in their wake the structural adjustment policy
of the World Bank and IMF. The worsening conflicts over the remaining
state services and resources, which were argued out ever less by legal
means but increasingly via clienteles and corrupt practices, did the
rest to weaken public institutions. The available clientele and the
services and goods which were supposed to be distributed via administrative
channels became ever more meagre, and the output of state-maintained
patronage ever smaller. Clientelisms input to integration for
the authoritarian regimes became ever more selective and weaker. The
implications are obvious: the elite not only ignored laws and decrees;
bureaucratic and public norms and rules were openly and informally violated
as a matter of almost daily routine.

Pre-colonial
and colonial roots
The neo-patrimonialising of the state, however, was not first the result
of the economic crisis in recent decades. Patrimonial systems characterised
the pre-colonial world, and neo-patrimonial ruling practices the colonial
era. The colonial state was not a modern rational state but a mixed
structure of a rational and traditional one. British indirect rule defined
the phenomenon and was also practised in a very similar form in other
colonies.
The rational state existed only as a core in the central administrations
of the colonies capitals. To deal with the native subjects
and secure its rule, the colonial administration used local authorities,
meaning genuine or fictitious indigenous rulers. This realm of indirect
rule remained the domain of patrimonial rule in which the local rulers
confirmed by the colonial power could exercise their own power personally,
arbitrarily, clientele-oriented and corruptly within the limits
set by the colonial state.
But the European administration also took an authoritarian, despotic
and arbitrary line with the lowest level of the indigenous people. District
officers and commandants de cercle had far-reaching powers and could
scarcely be controlled by the central colonial administration.
The majority of the population in the colonies were mostly spared
direct contact with legal-rational administration until after the Second
World War. Only later in the wake of decolonisation was the bureaucracy
expanded and staffed by local people. This, however, took place to an
insufficient degree and only for a comparatively short period. A culture
of legal-rational administration was able at best to develop in only
rudimentary form. With independence, the patrimonial, clientele logic
of rule spread to the remaining core of rational administrative bureaucracy.
Thus neo-patrimonialism means a form of rule for which a constitutive
insecurity is dominant. State action is unpredictable for all actors
other than the top patron, such as the president. Everyone strives by
different means to make the uncertain system calculable for his private
purposes. That means the state institutions can only fulfil in a limited
way their universal mission in the sense of serving public well-being.
And that in turn means they lack legitimacy and practical recognition
among the people.
Instead, particularistic politics predominate. Thus, besides formal
politics and the legal-rational institutions there is a second field
of informal politics that seriously interferes with and harms the way
the formal institutions function. Informal politics has reached such
a dimension that one must speak of institutionalised informality.

The neo-patrimonial legacy
The transitions in Africa of the last 10 years took place amid conditions
of extreme institutional insecurity. A change of regime is always a
situation of great uncertainty for all involved. The weak state does
not suddenly become stronger due to democratisation. On
the contrary, the democratically legitimised state inherits the institutional
legacy of the neo-patrimonial state. The actors continue to have two
institutionalised reference points: formal and informal politics and
their respective institutions. New, transition-related uncertainty is
added to the institutionalised insecurity of the old regime. At the
same time, uncertainty is not confined to the old and new formal institutions;
it also affects the old clientele networks because the change in power
initially makes the established networks ineffective in their previous
functions.
The old rulers and their friends will not support democracy. But the
new friends of democracy now in power also violate democratic
principles often enough. Frequently, they were once part of the old
regime and were merely pushed out of its clientele structure. Everyone
was politically socialised in the neo-patrimonial system.
Generally speaking, the new friends of democracy are confronted
with a fundamental dilemma of candidature, as Guillermo
ODonnell called it in 1992. The first task is to institutionalise
democracy, and the second is to retain power. In principle, it is not
easy to reconcile the two. In view of the prevailing neo-patrimonial
political culture, it proves to be an especially heavy burden.

Clientelism and rule of laws
contradict each other
An interest in institutionalising democracy demands that the democrats
pursue a policy of reform that will strengthen all formal institutions
of rule and give them practical legitimacy. That means that all interests
of the rule of law must be supported. Thus, not only a proper judicial
system must be set up but also a proper administration, one which enables
politics that is oriented on public well-being, is universalistic and
obeys rational-bureaucratic principles. To achieve that, clientele relationships,
the state machinery and politics must be isolated from each other.
But because of the insecurity of neo-patrimonial conditions, interest
in retaining power, which is linked directly to re-election, suggests
not doing without the informal politics of the clientele networks in
power. Interest in retaining power demands a strategic patronage policy,
which opposes the reform tasks outlined above.
So the political work of MPs and a new president faces a dilemma between
reform (meaning institutionalising democracy) and retaining power. The
two are mutually exclusive or can be reconciled only with great political
adroitness.
All these problems apply not only to state institutions but also to
civil society and socio-political organisations such as NGOs and political
parties. Informal, neo-patrimonial politics is also alive and well in
these institutions. The parties, above all, with their diverse functions
for democratic rule, manifest even more fragile bureaucratic structures
than the state bureaucracy. This applies in a similar way to associations
and NGOs and contributes to the organisational and political weakness
of civil society vis-à-vis the government and state.
Furthermore, the strong executive function of the African presidential
system, which was not given up in the new democratic constitutions,
enables the tradition of extra-formal politics to be continued. Weak
institutionalising of state organs and a strong executive president
come together systematically to ensure the continued existence of the
informal politics of patronage.

Prospects
Even if at times it may not appear so, the neo-patrimonial logic is
by no means inescapable. Ongoing privatisation since the 1990s and liberalisation
of business means that rent incomes are getting smaller and thus the
opportunities for political patronage are becoming fewer (or are at
least changing). With the increasing number of people losing the protection
of patronage, the number of those in opposition who are standing up
for proper, non-corrupt governance and articulating that in political
parties and civil society organisations is also growing (if not at a
ratio of 1:1).
The shrinking patronage resources of the authoritarian regime have
already strengthened the ranks of the democracy movement, including
by groups of entrepreneurs, some of whom finance the opposition and
thereby have contributed to their organisational capability. By this
means the existing democratic potential of civil society can equally
be strengthened, such as by young politicians who are committed to liberal,
rule-of-law standards. In addition, these forces, or at least those
in countries dependent on external financing, can expect (conditional)
international support.
Meanwhile, contrarian tendencies should not be overlooked. Privatisation
and liberalisation also involve the danger that state institutions and
their legitimacy will be weakened further in the eyes of the people
if they do not deliver expected social and economic benefits.
Two possibilities are still open to hybrid regimes: regression to dictatorship
or development to (liberal) democracy. Under the present conditions
of internal opposition and international pressure to make democratic
adjustments (human rights conditionality, the international civil society),
regression to dictatorship in the old form appears to be possible for
only a limited time. However, further development to liberal democracy
is less likely. Therefore the norm will be that the undemocratic systems
of hybrid regimes will continue to exist for the time being, at least
under conditions of great external dependency.
Dr. Gero Erdmann is a political scientist in the Berlin office
of the Institute of African Affairs, Hamburg.
iak@swp-berlin.org.
This article was translated from German by John England.

D+C Development and Cooperation,
published by: Deutsche Stiftung für internationale Entwicklung (DSE)
Editorial office, postal address:
D+C Development and Cooperation, P.O. Box, D-60268 Frankfurt, Germany.
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