Chapter 1: | Introduction |
Kaufmann adds that it is a myth to argue that it takes generations for governance to improve.35 According to Kaufmann, while it is true that institutions often change only gradually, in some countries there has been a sharp improvement in the short term, and that this evidence defies the view that while governance may deteriorate quickly, improvements are always slow and incremental.36 For instance, there has been a significant improvement since 1996 in the ‘voice and accountability’ indicator in countries ranging from Bosnia, Croatia and Ghana, to Indonesia, Serbia and Sierra Leone.37 And Kaufmann notes that the improvements exhibited by some African countries in a short period of time challenge the ‘Afro-pessimists.’38 Even so, ‘it is sobering that, on average, there has not been a worldwide improvement in overall governance during this period—and in a number of countries, including the Ivory Coast, Nepal, and Zimbabwe, there has been a sharp deterioration.’39
Kaufmann lists down the remaining myths about corruption and governance as follows: