Affiliation:
1. Lahore University of Management Sciences, Pakistan
2. London School of Economics and Political Science, UK
Abstract
Using the case of Pakistan, this article explores the distribution and politics of public goods provision in urban slums. Across slums, we find that public goods are mainly provided to households located in central slums rather than those in the urban periphery. Within slums, we find politicians target spending towards wealthy households but do not go through brokers, unlike the more-studied case of India. Overall, the article shows how electoral incentives in Pakistan are biased against programmatic public goods provision for the urban poor. Our results then point to variation in patronage politics among slums in the Global South.
Funder
International Growth Centre
Cited by
2 articles.
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1. What Do Brokers Provide for Urban Slums?;Journal of International Development;2024-04-14
2. Unpacking rural-urban clientelist networks;Oxford Development Studies;2024-04-02