The political economy of policy exceptionalism during economic transition: the case of rice policy in Vietnam
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Nguyen, H. T. M.
Do, H.
Kay, A.
Kompas, T.
Nguyen, C. N.
Tran, C. T.
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Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University
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The global food security agenda depends on the world rice market which is the thinnest among key cereal markets and often distorted by government interventions. Existing literature suggests that these interventions are not economically efficient. This paper focuses on the political economy of those interventions, asking why they were adopted. The answer is drawn
from insights on Vietnam as a case study. Although by no means a representative case, Vietnam is chosen not only for being a key rice exporter but especially so for its unique success in overcoming the inherent tension between "?socialist' and "?market-based' objectives during its transition to a market-based economy, albeit with a socialist orientation. We find that rice sector
in Vietnam has not been fully reformed to follow market rules despite Vietnam's accession to
the World Trade Organization. This is due to the interaction of economic liberalisation
processes and the ruling Communist Party's political survival strategy. In this context,
seemingly economic disequilibria are shown to be stable, enduring policy settings. In open
economy politics, the case reveals how economically sub-optimal policies may be `successful'
politically even in the face of what appear to be severe domestic political constraints on reform
from external economic pressures.
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