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Xavier Moss's avatar

I doubt it's a huge contributing factor, but one interesting thing is that under Banda they co-operated with apartheid South Africa, the only Black African country to do. From what some of my Malawian colleagues have told me, there is still much lingering resentment about this which makes deals with neighbours sometimes politically difficult, which is a huge factor for a mountainous and landlocked country.

That said my own perception is that Malawi has fallen into a weird democracy trap where it's just democratic enough that short-term solutions win elections - there's currently a massive road building project in Lilongwe and there's the agricultural policies you mentioned - but there's no ability to invest in longer-term projects, AND simultaneously the short-term fixes don't really work and either balloon in cost or don't get maintained.

One question for me, having been to many African countries, is that Malawi just doesn't _feel_ as poor as some others, despite being statistically richer. Maybe it's the stability and safety but Malawi is sandiwched between Eritrea and Somalia, and having been to both Malawi feels like it's in a league above! It feels better than Burkina Faso, which ostensibly has double the GDP. But that's just anecdote.

Kartik's avatar

It's an interesting question, one that should occupy more of more people's mindshare. Here are a number of thoughts that could be useful for you to consider:

1. I don't think Malawi is a special puzzle and other poor countries are not. Very few poor countries have monocausal development stories. War and state collapse explain short-term shocks, but many countries have overcome those to grow--as a result of many other factors.

The article itself lists multiple candidate explanations for Malawi, so I was confused as to why you tried to frame Malawi as a mystery. The fact that no single factor fully explains Malawi's outcome does not mean we lack explanations. Multicausal accounts are still explanations--just more complex ones that people far too often claim are "unsatisfying". (The development process isn't intended to "satisfy" anyone.)

A better framing could be around the residual--many of the factors listed in the article do go some ways in explaining Malawi's economic development level, but perhaps not all of it. It almost seemed like that "unexplained portion" is what you were after in the article, but you never said it explicitly.

2. I'm not a fan of the "tautology" critique. Development is fundamentally a complex process characterized by deep endogeneity and all manner of feedback loops that are hard to pin down. The factors you mention--ag productivity, lack of structural transformation, low human capital, etc.--are simultaneously outcomes of and inputs to economic development. This is the case in Malawi just like anywhere else.

Yes, one can and should dig deeper, but articulating these factors is itself useful because many of these things are both causes AND levers...the latter of which is important for policy.

3. The article frames institutions, geography, and colonial history as "proximate" — but the standard development literature treats these as deep causes of long-run income differences. See the diagram here from Rodrik and Subramanian's famous paper:

https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-three-deep-determinants-of-income-by-Rodrik_fig1_325342409

Geography is hard to change, and institutions move slowly. The article's claim that these factors "don't predict outcomes nor satisfyingly capture much of the reason for variation" conflates two distinct questions: explaining levels of development and explaining changes in growth rates. Much of the institutions literature is explicitly trying to explain long-run income levels, not short-to-medium-run growth accelerations.

This matters because post-WWII growth in developing countries has been episodic — punctuated accelerations and decelerations — whereas growth in Western economies over the preceding century was more steady despite major disruptions. Slow-moving structural factors like institutions and geography are unlikely to explain these episodes on their own.

The interaction between slow and fast-moving factors (e.g., political dynamics, policy) probably matters a lot, and the article misses this.

4. The article states that Malawi's institutions are "broadly better than Rwanda's, Vietnam's, and China's." This is a claim that few if any development professionals would make, and it is almost certainly wrong. (I'd be surprised if this were true in the relatively poor quant measures we have of political institutions, and knowing friends who have worked in these places and having worked on some and been in all of them myself, I don't know anyone who would make such a claim.)

The institutions literature focuses as much on economic institutions as political ones--which you don't mention. We shouldn't necessarily equate formal democratic procedures — competitive elections, peaceful transfers — with institutional quality writ large (or even with genuinely inclusive political institutions, for that matter). Malawi may score reasonably on electoral competition while having weak economic institutions, which aligns with the political economy points around agriculture and land.

5. I'm not an ag or agronomy expert, but I do know through my own work that Malawi does in fact have some meaningful ag opportunities--in soya, sorghum, mangoes, and macadamia nuts, among others. The failure to capitalize on these opportunities points back to policy choices, political economy constraints, and the other structural factors listed elsewhere in the article

6. I've come to believe in the power of political economy explanations, which the article rightfully emphasizes. There is more literature out there that would help to unpack the emergence of the political settlement you mention.

More broadly, you mention political economy in the end as an important takeaway, after having framed it as describing an equilibrium rather explaining why it exists. Well, that sounds like a call to dig deeper on the political and economic history...not a reason to brush it off.

7. The claim that "development economics specifically exists to tell countries what to do" is not an accurate or widely shared definition of the field. Many development economists would not describe their work this way, and the field has a substantial body of work oriented toward understanding causes rather than prescribing action. This is why people like me and my colleagues, and people like Ken Opalo, make the distinction between academic research and policy research.

I think this points to a fundamental confusion between causes and levers. The causes of a country's development level and the available levers for changing it are separate problems. Geography may be a deep cause but is largely not a directly actionable lever — though transport infrastructure and trade integration offer partial handles. Trade and industrial policy are more tractable levers but may not be root causes.

The article opens by asking about causes and closes by criticizing development economics for failing to generate prescriptions. Those are different concerns, and conflating them doesn't actually get us much closer to answering the relevant policy questions.

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