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3 - The State and the Political Economy of Distribution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 November 2024

Miriam R. Lowi
Affiliation:
The College of New Jersey
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Summary

I begin the analysis of oil-financed institutionalized practices with a focus on government transfers and subsidies, highlighting the variation in access to resources in Gulf monarchies. I describe various types of transfers: 1) universal – those, such as free health care and subsidized household utilities, which all citizens enjoy; 2) particularist – those which are extended to specific communities – as in allowances to members of tribes or royal families and contracts to business elites; 3) idiosyncratic – as in funds to men to assist with their marriage expenses. I note changes to government distributions from mid-2014 and the oil price downturn. I then explore matters of equity and exclusion, highlighting those social categories who are privileged and those who are discriminated against in access to distributions in these states. I argue that the hierarchization of society and the related variation in access to resources are both integral to the shaping of the national community and a means for the state to exercise control insofar as key social categories are appeased via the relative marginalization of others.

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Refining the Common Good
Oil, Islam and Politics in Gulf Monarchies
, pp. 47 - 73
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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