The article assesses the social consequences of the democratic transition that began in Pakistan in 1988 and ended in 1999 by analysing public spending for health and education and changes in human development indicators. Available information indicates that the return to democracy did not lead to greater spending in these two sectors. It is argued that the key internal factors that hampered government commitment to social welfare were the pre-eminence among elected representatives of social groups unwilling to invest in the human capital of the majority and the dominance of the armed forces in the country's power politics.
Democratic transition and social spending : the case of Pakistan in the 1990s / E. A Giunchi. - In: DEMOCRATIZATION. - ISSN 1351-0347. - 18:6(2011 Dec), pp. 572621.1270-572621.1290.
Democratic transition and social spending : the case of Pakistan in the 1990s
E. A GiunchiPrimo
2011
Abstract
The article assesses the social consequences of the democratic transition that began in Pakistan in 1988 and ended in 1999 by analysing public spending for health and education and changes in human development indicators. Available information indicates that the return to democracy did not lead to greater spending in these two sectors. It is argued that the key internal factors that hampered government commitment to social welfare were the pre-eminence among elected representatives of social groups unwilling to invest in the human capital of the majority and the dominance of the armed forces in the country's power politics.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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