Abstract

While it is commonly believed that democracy influences public service provision, comparably few studies have assessed how recent democratisation in developing countries has impacted tangible public service outcomes for economically deprived population shares. Using panel data from 46 sub-Saharan African countries between 1990 and 2010 as well as qualitative country case examples from Ghana, Swaziland, Uganda, Senegal and Rwanda, this paper examines considerable and growing rural electrification variations in terms of political, economic and demographic variables. The analyses suggest that democracy is strongly associated with rural electrification increases and rural versus urban electrification inequality decreases in sub-Saharan Africa. This result is robust to a variety of political, economic and demographic control variables as well as different econometric modelling assumptions. The paper further presents novel multi-variant evidence supporting that contested elections with strong oppositions as well as effective policy implementing institutions may act as intervening institutional mechanisms that explain a part of democracy's association with rural electricity provision. Higher income per capita, national savings and population densities may further foster rural electrification, while high foreign aid shares of GDP and rural population percentages may pose challenges to access equality.

Highlights

  • The UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development adopted in September 2015 includes the goal to end global energy poverty by providing universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all

  • Rural electrification appears to be attributable to politicians' actions, a crucial prerequisite for such an association to be meaningful

  • While electrification has been possible in the absence of democratic institutions, the analyses suggest that rural electrification has been more successful in sub-Saharan African states with more democratic institutions, thereby challenging classical work on democracy and development such as by Huntington and Nelson (1976)

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Summary

Introduction

The UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development adopted in September 2015 includes the goal to end global energy poverty by providing universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all. The association between democracy and rural electrification is studied in panel data models controlling for a variety of political, economic and demographic variables.

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