So this is my inaugural actual Mancur Olsen-related post (of roving bandit fame).
Is there a collective action problem in parliamentary scrutiny in multi-party systems?
In an American-style 2-party system the oppositions reaps 100% of the political benefits from asking awkward questions of the government, but in a more European multi-party system the gains from scrutiny of government may be spread amongst several opposition parties. Could this reduce the incentive for opposition parties and their members to scrutinise the government?
Just a thought. And a potentially testable one. In fact it might well have been in which case I'd love to know. Abhijeet suggests Indian data would be perfect for a rich cross-state panel.
30 April 2025
More Survey Fun
I image this must be a problem for surveyors everywhere - how do you keep a close enough eye on your enumerators to make sure they aren't just making stuff up?
Fortunately in Southern Sudan some of these cases are relatively easy to spot. A household in rural Sudan which produced 12 sacks of Fanta in the last month? And one with no children which still managed to consume 14kgs of Cerelac in a week?
Fortunately in Southern Sudan some of these cases are relatively easy to spot. A household in rural Sudan which produced 12 sacks of Fanta in the last month? And one with no children which still managed to consume 14kgs of Cerelac in a week?
Assorted Links
I love angry rants
The Fijian press's response to censorship
This sounds interesting, I hope someone is evaluating it properly
Alex de Waal on Collier
These guys are going to be pissed off when they find out how little economics can tell them about the crisis.
This sounds interesting, I hope someone is evaluating it properly
Alex de Waal on Collier
These guys are going to be pissed off when they find out how little economics can tell them about the crisis.
29 April 2025
Juba Food Blogging
I'm pretty sure this could be a world-first.
God I'm terrible with names though. Anyway the new coffee place in Malakia on the main road (there is only one) has started doing some decent food. The coffee (actual real cappucino! in Juba!) and cake is already pretty impressive, and I've had their pizzas before which really aren't bad and cheap by Juba standards (around SDG 15 or $6), although everywhere seems to be doing pizza these days. Anyway they do a really good curry. Not quite the same selection as Hotel Salaam - there is a choice of "chicken curry" or "fish curry" - but both are genuinely really really tasty.
Highly Recommended.
God I'm terrible with names though. Anyway the new coffee place in Malakia on the main road (there is only one) has started doing some decent food. The coffee (actual real cappucino! in Juba!) and cake is already pretty impressive, and I've had their pizzas before which really aren't bad and cheap by Juba standards (around SDG 15 or $6), although everywhere seems to be doing pizza these days. Anyway they do a really good curry. Not quite the same selection as Hotel Salaam - there is a choice of "chicken curry" or "fish curry" - but both are genuinely really really tasty.
Highly Recommended.
28 April 2025
Jigy Jigy
A solution to the budget crisis from a friend at UNDP. Go Dutch and start taxing the East African "unmarried business women" who are undercutting the locals for "Jigy Jigy."
Pity the poor "undercover" journalists who wrote this piece.
My friend also suggests we might need some "hookers without borders" to advise these ladies on their pricing strategies. $5 for one ejaculation and $10 for the whole night!
Posted by
Lee Crawfurd
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Labels:
gettin by,
prostitution,
protectionism,
tax

African Proverb of the Day
From the BBC world service:
"Those who seek to drown their sorrows with alcohol should know that sorrows too can swim."
"Those who seek to drown their sorrows with alcohol should know that sorrows too can swim."
27 April 2025
Winning arguments with science
This is brilliant.
"When you don't have children - as I don't, thus far - one entertaining thing to do with friends who do is as follows. Wait until they're gazing, lovestruck, into the eyes of their newborn baby, tucking their toddler into bed or proudly watching their 21-year-old graduate. Then creep up behind them, slap down a copy of the Journal Of Marriage And Family, vol 65, no 3, and triumphantly declare: "Ha! You may think parenthood has changed your life for the better, but, in fact, the statistical analyses contained herein, along with numerous other studies, demonstrate conclusively that having children makes people, on average, slightly less happy than before!" Then walk away cackling. They may never speak to you again, but that won't matter: you will have won the argument, using Science."
"When you don't have children - as I don't, thus far - one entertaining thing to do with friends who do is as follows. Wait until they're gazing, lovestruck, into the eyes of their newborn baby, tucking their toddler into bed or proudly watching their 21-year-old graduate. Then creep up behind them, slap down a copy of the Journal Of Marriage And Family, vol 65, no 3, and triumphantly declare: "Ha! You may think parenthood has changed your life for the better, but, in fact, the statistical analyses contained herein, along with numerous other studies, demonstrate conclusively that having children makes people, on average, slightly less happy than before!" Then walk away cackling. They may never speak to you again, but that won't matter: you will have won the argument, using Science."
22 April 2025
Another big win for transparency and good governance
The GoSS Ministry of Legal Affairs has established a website with copies of all the laws passed by the Southern Sudan Legislative Assembly. Fantastic, now I don't have to just read about them in the Tribune.
Now if only the Ministry of Finance could get one so people could find the damn budget themselves.
In other data (non)news - why is so hard to get comparative data on basic aspects of African governments and their budgets? Is there not some repository somewhere of staffing levels and spending levels on different sectors
Now if only the Ministry of Finance could get one so people could find the damn budget themselves.
In other data (non)news - why is so hard to get comparative data on basic aspects of African governments and their budgets? Is there not some repository somewhere of staffing levels and spending levels on different sectors
21 April 2025
Out of Office
There is no internet at the Ministry of Finance. Posting may be sporadic
19 April 2025
A Sudanese delicacy
So the rainy season is just getting started in Juba. Maybe twice a week we are treated to an insane monsoon-style tropical rainstorm. Last week lightning struck right outside the office window and it was like a bomb just went off.
The rain also means the proliferation of insects. Hoards of little flying bugs have been swarming around the external lights of the house. Jimmy the guard and Anna the cleaning lady both say these bugs are very tasty when fried. People pay 3 SDG (£1) in the market for a cup of them. Jimmy was collecting some in a plastic bucket when I got home the other day. So last night I asked him how his bugs were, but he hadn't cooked them yet so he ran off to prepare some so I could try them.
Now it would be rude not to right? And they're actually not bad. A bit like popcorn - with that soft yet slightly crunchy consistency - similar to sugar puffs cereal. Only with a slightly meaty taste.
Yum.
The rain also means the proliferation of insects. Hoards of little flying bugs have been swarming around the external lights of the house. Jimmy the guard and Anna the cleaning lady both say these bugs are very tasty when fried. People pay 3 SDG (£1) in the market for a cup of them. Jimmy was collecting some in a plastic bucket when I got home the other day. So last night I asked him how his bugs were, but he hadn't cooked them yet so he ran off to prepare some so I could try them.
Now it would be rude not to right? And they're actually not bad. A bit like popcorn - with that soft yet slightly crunchy consistency - similar to sugar puffs cereal. Only with a slightly meaty taste.
Yum.
18 April 2025
Nazis in Southern Sudan?
The State government for Central Equatoria has recently been clearing up settlements in Juba. This has meant widespread demolition of Tukuls (mud-huts) and market stalls. Many people are arguing that the victims were warned, and would not move until action was taken. Either way its pretty grim. I even had to go without the fruit and veg stall and the rolex stand (a Ugandan snack - fried egg rolled up in a chapati) outside my office for a couple of weeks before the stall-holders began to rebuild out of the wreckage.
But the editor of The Citizen was so offended that he was forced to take a break in Europe to recover. Whilst in Germany he decided that:
"what our government is doing today in Juba is similar to what the Germany Government of National Unity did during the time sof Adolf Hitler in 1930 and 1940" (Leader, 17 April 2025)
Ouch.
But the editor of The Citizen was so offended that he was forced to take a break in Europe to recover. Whilst in Germany he decided that:
"what our government is doing today in Juba is similar to what the Germany Government of National Unity did during the time sof Adolf Hitler in 1930 and 1940" (Leader, 17 April 2025)
Ouch.
17 April 2025
Insecurity, rain and dispersion...
...do not make a good combination. Aside from the obvious economic and human costs, it makes statistician's lives horrible. My friend was at the airport at 7.30am three days in a row for a flight which was cancelled each time because it was raining in Yambio. The poverty survey currently being conducted has had to replace NINE enumeration areas because the survey team turned up and NOBODY WAS THERE. The whole village had got up and left, there was nobody to interview in the entire area.
16 April 2025
Who said working in tax was boring?
15 April 2025
Garang's Infrastructure Plan
Dr. John Garang was an economist (phd from Iowa), and so I'm sure this infrastructure plan with connections to DRC, Uganda and Kenya (but not the North) was all about economic geography and not at all politics. The red lines are railway tracks by the way. Ambitious.


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