Dr Diego Maiorano
Does decentralisation promote clientelism? If yes, through which mechanisms? We answer these questions through an analysis of India's (and the world's) largest workfare programme, the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), in two Indian states: Rajasthan and Andhra Pradesh. The two states adopted radically different implementation models: Rajasthan's decentralised one stands in contrast with Andhra Pradesh's centralised and bureaucracy-led model. Using a mixed method approach, we find that in both states local implementers have the incentives to distribute MGNREGA work in a clientelistic fashion. However, in the Rajasthan's model, these incentives are stronger, because of the decentralised implementation model. Accordingly, our quantitative evidence shows that clientelism is more serious a problem in Rajasthan than in AP.
Diego Maiorano is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the University of Nottingham in the UK. His research focuses on India's politics and political economy and on political and economic change in developing countries, with special reference to the themes of poverty and inequality. He is the author of Autumn of the Matriarch: Indira Gandhi's Final Term in Office (2015).