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Conclusion
What are the general conclusions to be drawn from the
Nigerian experience? The first is the tension between economic liberalization and
political authoritarianism. Economic liberalization imposes tremendous hardships on
disadvantaged groups and undermines the social contract of the post-colonial development
model.10 Experiences elsewhere, such as in Latin America and Eastern
Europe, show that democratic régimes come under considerable pressure as they try to
manage complex transition programmes in the context of economic crisis and restructuring.
Attempts to impose a sense of realism on the population, i.e. getting people to accept the
macro-economic policies of stabilization, is often accompanied by calls for welfare
support, which would entail some relaxation of budgetary discipline. The need to make
concessions to vulnerable groups has been recognized by most governments. The
international financial institutions have also been trying to link adjustment policies
with poverty alleviation programmes in many African countries.
It is apparent that economic reforms of the type
formulated in most African countries in the 1980s will be difficult to implement in a
liberal democratic framework. And yet the reforms themselves require a new political
legitimacy for their success. Democratization is supposed to provide the basis for a new
social contract predicated on new social and political alliances. But the forces in
support of the reforms (or those likely to benefit from them) remain fragmented and
politically weak. Given the state's continued control of huge oil revenues, most of the
dominant social groups still perceive of politics as the struggle for the control and
appropriation of public resources. Difficulties in forging a sustainable social alliance11 have contributed to the intensification of authoritarian
practices. The adverse conditions created by both economic liberalization and
authoritarian rule provide an "enabling environment" for civil groups to press
for democratization. Democratization in this context is an antidote to structural
adjustment. This distinguishes the democracy movement in Africa from that of Eastern
Europe and explains the ambivalence of Western powers and international financial
institutions toward the struggles for democracy in Africa.12 While in support of democracy, they remain opposed to any attempts
to change the direction of the economic reforms.
The second conclusion is the contradiction between the
dynamic pressures for democratization at the civil arena and the conformist thrust of the
political actors at the state level. Democratization requires the liberalization of both
civil and political society. Most of the active groups in civil society have not been able
to make much impact at the wider political arena. The military and the principal political
parties continue to dominate this sphere. The decision by the civil political class to
accept the military-decreed parties is an indication of its reluctance to open up the
political system to democratic challenges and establish effective links between the
pressures in civil society and the democratization of state practices. On the other hand,
the strength of the civil groups is compromised by the virtual lack of participation of
the peasant communities in the pro-democracy movement. Both the military and the
politicians rely on the disarticulations in rural-urban relations, and the patronage
networks that arise therefrom, to maintain the status quo at the political level.
Underlying the authoritarian character of democratization
is the crisis of state power and capitalist hegemony in civil society. The debate on
capitalism in Africa has been concerned primarily with the dominance of capitalist
property relations rather than with the social context in which they operate.13 Radical political economists tend to assume that the hegemony of
the business class and the power élite will naturally follow from the development of
capitalism. But the recession and the market reforms seem to have generated an intense
ideological and cultural opposition to capitalist rule. The rate of popular rebellions and
withdrawals from formal state and transnational projects is a function of weak ruling
class hegemony (Rudebeck, 1989 and 1990). This weakness has undermined the capacity of the
ruling authorities (both civil and military) and business groups to opt for democratic
forms of government. Beckman's advocacy for a "bourgeois democracy" in Africa,
with strong pressures from popular forces, is difficult to sustain in this context
(Beckman, 1990). As Gutto puts it, African ruling classes "fear free and fair
elections" (Gutto, 1988). Elections, conducted fairly, will impose some
accountability on state practices and check the excesses of rent-seeking activities. The
dilemmas of the ruling groups have meant that in most countries in the continent, popular
social movements have come to play a major role in the struggles for democracy. This has
not excluded sections of the dominant power groups from joining these forces in the
pro-democracy movement.
The central role of the poor and disadvantaged in the
democracy project underlines the need to link formal democracy with more substantive forms
of popular rule. I highlight two arguments for this linkage. The first, primarily
theoretical, is derived from my original formulation of the problem, in which
authoritarianism is linked with particular forms of accumulation and social structures.
Stable democratization logically assumes significant changes in the structure and forms of
accumulation, than an exclusive focus on rules and institution building. Such changes, as
we have argued, involve the integration of rural-urban relations, and an improvement in
the democratic participation of popular groups in the governance of economic enterprises.
This calls for the empowerment of the majority, but socially deprived groups, the
provision of popular welfare and the reduction of inequalities.
The second argument is political or normative. Social
movements have themselves linked the struggles for democracy with questions of alternative
development strategies (Anyang' Nyong'o, 1987; Mamdani, Mkandawire and Wamba-dia-Wamba,
1988). Indeed, it is primarily the debate on how to overcome the economic and political
problems of the crisis and economic reforms that has brought to the fore questions of
political rights and accountable government. For instance, the original decision of the
Nigeria Labour Congress to launch a Labour Party was to provide a platform to strengthen
workers' struggles against repression and the economic hardship of structural adjustment
(Olukoshi, forthcoming). A Labour Party in government was expected to implement the union's
alternative programme to the economic reforms (NLC, 1985).
This linkage between democracy and alternative development
questions an aspect of the current African debate that emphasizes the struggle for "democracy
in its own right" (Anyang' Nyong'o, 1988b,c; Mkandawire, 1988b; Gutto, 1988; Shivji,
1990; Ibrahim, 1990). Pressures for democratization do not present themselves in such
idealist and abstract terms. While it is an ideal to be cherished, democracy must make
sense to the interests of the contending social groups. These interests do not have to be
narrowly defined as economic; they can also be social and political. Linking democracy to
the restructuring of the economy allows individuals and organizations to pose the question
of democratic governance of public resources much more sharply. It is a more realistic way
of surmounting the colossal tasks of launching underdeveloped crisis economies along the
paths of stable and sustainable democratization.
10 The civil war of 1966-1970 seriously weakened the social contract of the early
post-colonial model of development. The social contract was re-launched in Gowon's Dawn of
National Reconstruction speech of January 1970 (New Nigerian, 1970).
11 Programmes such as MAMSER (mass mobilization for self-reliance) and DFRRI
(directorate for food, roads and rural infrastructure) have not achieved their objects of
creating a new social order despite the huge resources they command and their co-optation
of many professionals.
12 French troops were sent to oil-rich Gabon in 1990 to defend Oman Bongo's régime
against the mass demonstrations for democratization.
13 The debates on capitalism in Kenya in the Review of African Political Economy
(Nos. 8, 17, 19) and on classes and imperialism in Africa, in Dar es Salaam (Y. Tandon
(ed.), State, class and imperialism, Tanzania Publishing House) did not address the
social dimensions of capitalism.
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