Constitutionalizing the Market Economy and the Quest for Constitutionalism

Author:

Steytler Nico

Abstract

Abstract The contributions to this volume show that the return to multiparty democracy in the 1990s was accompanied by the explicit or implicit constitutionalization of a market economy, principally through the protection of property and the insistence on freedom of contract. Although land and other natural resources are crucial to the economy of many countries, the constitutionalization of the guardianship role which the state should have over such resources is uneven. Affording protection to a market economy did not mean that the state withdrew from the marketplace: the notion of the ‘developmental state’ has seen the state playing the role both of a dominant regulator of the economy and a full participant in it, this by way of state-owned enterprises. However, despite the state’s quest for control of the domestic market, its powers are curtailed through a globalization of the economy powered by the international trading system. Finally, while constitutionalism might be a necessary element for a growing economy, it is far from a sufficient condition for it. There is, nonetheless, a strong correlation between the absence of constitutionalism and negative economic growth.

Publisher

Oxford University PressOxford

Reference21 articles.

1. C15.P143Ayele ZA, ‘Constitutionalism: The Missing Element in South Sudan’s Elusive Quest for Peace through Federalism?’ in Fombad CM and Steytler N (eds), Decentralisation and Constitutionalism in Africa (OUP 2019).

2. C15.P144Ayele ZA, ‘Constitutionalism and Electoral Authoritarianism in Ethiopia’ in Fombad CM and Steytler N (eds), Democracy, Elections and Constitutionalism in Africa (OUP 2021).

3. C15.P145Ayele ZA and Fessha YT, ‘Controlling Public Health Emergencies in Federal Systems: The Case of Ethiopia’, in Steytler N (ed), Comparative Federalism and Covid-19: Combatting the Pandemic (Routledge 2022).

4. C15.P146Bhorat H and others, ‘Resource Dependence and Inequality in Africa: Impacts, Consequences and Potential Solutions’ in Odusola A and others (eds), Income Inequality Trends in Sub-Saharan Africa: Divergence, Determinants and Consequences (United Nations Development Programme 2019).

5. On the Economic Consequences of Civil War;Oxford Economic Papers,1999

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