By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
DailynewsegyptDailynewsegypt
  • Home
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    Egypt’s IDA gears up to provide its services for investors online
    Egypt’s IDA gears up to provide its services for investors online 
    March 29, 2023
    Egypt. Germany discuss promotion of cooperation in communications, digital transformation
    Egypt, Germany discuss promotion of cooperation in communications, digital transformation
    March 29, 2023
    Egypt-Australia trade exchange reaches AUD 1bn in FY2022: Ambassador
    Egypt-Australia trade exchange reaches AUD 1bn in FY2022: Ambassador
    March 29, 2023
    Volatile trading on EGX amid anticipation of interest rate movement
    Volatile trading on EGX amid anticipation of interest rate movement
    March 29, 2023
    Mohamed Nasr El-Din appointed as new CEO of Telecom Egypt
    Mohamed Nasr El-Din appointed as new CEO of Telecom Egypt
    March 29, 2023
  • Politics
    PoliticsShow More
    Ugandan president says peacekeepers will help stabilize eastern DR Congo
    Ugandan president says peacekeepers will help stabilize eastern DR Congo
    March 31, 2023
    Formes US President Donald Trump Is Indicted in New York
    Trump indicted in hush-money payment case
    March 31, 2023
    Humza Yousaf is to be the first minister of Scotland after narrowly winning the election for leader of the Scottish National Party
    Humza Yousaf becomes Scotland’s first minister: A decade of polls suggest he’ll struggle to deliver independence, just like Nicola Sturgeon
    March 30, 2023
    Iranian FM says Tehran, Moscow taking final step toward signing long-term cooperation agreement
    Iranian FM says Tehran, Moscow taking final step toward signing long-term cooperation agreement
    March 29, 2023
    Health Minister, UNODC discuss bilateral cooperation in combating drugs, corruption
    Health Minister, UNODC discuss bilateral cooperation in combating drugs, corruption
    March 29, 2023
  • Interviews
    InterviewsShow More
    Developers have to offer innovative products, state should provide more facilities to stimulate industry: Kareem Mamoun
    Developers have to offer innovative products, state should provide more facilities to stimulate industry: Kareem Mamoun
    March 27, 2023
    Government should help Egyptian arts revive its pioneering role: Omar Abdel Aziz
    Government should help Egyptian arts revive its pioneering role: Omar Abdel Aziz
    March 15, 2023
    Interconnected healthcare systems in Africa require political will from North African leaders: Amref official
    Interconnected healthcare systems in Africa require political will from North African leaders: Amref official
    March 12, 2023
    EGX ready for government’s IPOs programme: Chairperson
    EGX ready for government’s IPOs programme: Chairperson
    February 15, 2023
    British International Investment invests $4.5bn in 700 businesses across Africa: Sherine Shohdy
    February 15, 2023
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
Reading: Providing legal identity to all a great step for good governance
Share
Notification
Latest News
Ugandan president says peacekeepers will help stabilize eastern DR Congo
Ugandan president says peacekeepers will help stabilize eastern DR Congo
Politics
Formes US President Donald Trump Is Indicted in New York
Trump indicted in hush-money payment case
Politics
Humza Yousaf is to be the first minister of Scotland after narrowly winning the election for leader of the Scottish National Party
Humza Yousaf becomes Scotland’s first minister: A decade of polls suggest he’ll struggle to deliver independence, just like Nicola Sturgeon
Politics Opinion
Egypt’s IDA gears up to provide its services for investors online
Egypt’s IDA gears up to provide its services for investors online 
Business
Iranian FM says Tehran, Moscow taking final step toward signing long-term cooperation agreement
Iranian FM says Tehran, Moscow taking final step toward signing long-term cooperation agreement
Politics World
Aa
Aa
DailynewsegyptDailynewsegypt
  • Home
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Interviews
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Home
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Interviews
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Advertise
© 2023 DNE News. All Rights Reserved.
Dailynewsegypt > Blog > Opinion > Providing legal identity to all a great step for good governance
Opinion

Providing legal identity to all a great step for good governance

Daily News Egypt
Last updated: 2015/05/03 at 3:29 AM
By Daily News Egypt 8 Min Read
Share
Dr. Bjørn Lomborg
SHARE
Dr. Bjørn Lomborg
Dr. Bjørn Lomborg

By Dr. Bjørn Lomborg

Corruption last year cost the world more than $1tr. That is $1tr we can’t use to get better health care, education, food and environment. A study shows that corruption in Egypt costs each citizen about EGP 2,715 each year. And corruption is only part of the problem of poor governance – many countries are run ineffectively, lacking accountability, transparency and rule of law.

Running countries better would have obvious benefits. It would not only reduce corruption but governments would provide more services the public wants and at better quality. It is also likely that economic growth would increase. In a recent UN survey of over 7.4 million people around the world, an honest and responsive government was fourth in the list of people’s priorities, with only education and healthcare and better jobs being rated higher. Survey participants from northern Africa placed it eighth, before freedom from discrimination and access to affordable and nutritious food.

But how should we get better governance? This is an important question as the world is considering what goals to set. At the turn of the century, the international community agreed on a far-reaching set of targets to improve the lives of the world’s poorest people by 2015: the Millennium Development Goals. They focused on health, poverty and education and did a great deal of good. But they didn’t mention governance.

This September, the world’s 193 nations aim to set the next set of targets for the year 2030. They want to look across all major areas, from health and nutrition, to environment, conflicts and education, and they want to include some targets on good governance. Without it, tackling problems like nutrition and environment becomes harder – if there is corruption, most of the money for food may go elsewhere, and if there is little institutional control, ambitious environmental rules may just be flouted.

It is vitally important that we choose the best targets. Right now, there are 169 proposed targets – each one someone’s pet project – but not all of them are equally good. To help the world’s governments pick the best targets, my think tank, the Copenhagen Consensus Center, has asked 60 teams of experts to do an economic analysis of the more promising proposals, showing which targets will cost little and do much good – and which ones will cost lots but do little good, essentially providing a level playing field to compare widely different targets.

Mary E. Hilderbrand of the Center for International Development at Harvard has written the main paper on improving governance. As she points out, it is obvious that well-governed nations are better than ill-governed ones. But there are two problems.

The first problem revolves around whether good governance is a prerequisite for development or a consequence of it. Historical analyses have shown that good institutions like security of property rights is the single most important factor behind the variation in wealth of countries, and that more corruption goes together with less economic growth. That seems to suggest that better secured property rights and less corruption will generate more wealth. However, further analyses have shown that it could just as easily be that higher wealth and economic growth lead to better governance. For now, it is hard to say that good governance is the main way to start a virtuous circle.

The second problem is that we don’t know much about how to get good governance. A study of 80 countries where the World Bank had programmes to improve governance showed that governance improved in 39% of countries but worsened in 25% – what could look like a moderate success. However, all the countries the World Bank didn’t help had similar success and failure rates – suggesting that the World Bank programs had made no difference.

The simple point is that while everyone can agree it would be great to get rid of corruption and have more transparent and accountable government, we often know very little about how to achieve it. That is why proposed targets like “substantially reduce corruption and bribery in all its forms” sound great, but are essentially well-meaning slogans with little content.

Indeed, Hilderbrand finds that many proposed targets are too generalised and some even a poor use of resources.

However, she does find one target that would do a lot of good for each dollar spent. “By 2030 provide legal identity for all, including birth registration.” This may sound like a very un-ambitious step to those of us lucky enough to live in prosperous democracies where such things are taken for granted, but it would be a major step for many developing countries.

Importantly, this is a measurable outcome, so progress can be monitored. It also means that there must be functioning public services to provide registration facilities and maintain records. Building this capacity in a single well-defined area would provide a clear model for how other services can be provided effectively. It is also unlikely in any case that a registration service would exist in a vacuum; an effective one would almost certainly be a sign of an emerging public service competence.

There are also real benefits to each citizen of having a proper legal identity. It helps them to claim their legal rights, for example, and would certainly also help to establish property rights, which are vital to allow individuals to prosper and the economy to grow. Elections become less vulnerable to corruption when voters are properly registered. And, as an economy grows, a proper legal identity is essential for opening a bank account or getting a driving licence.

 

Good governance is important. But instead of platitudes we should focus on measurable, attainable targets that will actually make a big difference for the next 15 years.

Dr. Bjørn Lomborg, an adjunct professor at the Copenhagen Business School, directs the Copenhagen Consensus Center, ranking the smartest solutions to the world’s biggest problems by cost-benefit. He is the author of The Skeptical Environmentalist and Cool It. His new book is How To Spend $75 Billion to Make the World a Better Place.

You Might Also Like

Humza Yousaf becomes Scotland’s first minister: A decade of polls suggest he’ll struggle to deliver independence, just like Nicola Sturgeon

Egypt, Germany discuss promotion of cooperation in communications, digital transformation

Egypt-Australia trade exchange reaches AUD 1bn in FY2022: Ambassador

Opinion| 20 years after the US invaded Iraq: Did Washington lose trillions of dollars in the war?

Opinion| The Russian-Chinese summit and the new multilateral world

TAGGED: Daily News Egypt, DNE, Dr. Bjørn Lomborg, Egypt, government, opinion
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Previous Article Notes From America: The Falafel Wars
Next Article How much longer can Al-Sisi manage to manipulate Egyptian politics?
2 Comments

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Ad image

Stay Connected

Facebook Like
Twitter Follow
Instagram Follow
Youtube Subscribe

Latest News

Ugandan president says peacekeepers will help stabilize eastern DR Congo
Ugandan president says peacekeepers will help stabilize eastern DR Congo
Politics
Formes US President Donald Trump Is Indicted in New York
Trump indicted in hush-money payment case
Politics
Humza Yousaf is to be the first minister of Scotland after narrowly winning the election for leader of the Scottish National Party
Humza Yousaf becomes Scotland’s first minister: A decade of polls suggest he’ll struggle to deliver independence, just like Nicola Sturgeon
Politics Opinion
Egypt’s IDA gears up to provide its services for investors online
Egypt’s IDA gears up to provide its services for investors online 
Business
//
Egypt’s only independent daily newspaper in English. Discuss the country’s latest with the paper’s reporters, editors, and other readers.

Quick Link

  • Home
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Interviews
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

© 2023 DNE News. All Rights Reserved.

Join Us!

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news, podcasts etc..

Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?