“…Conditionality comes in the form of rules, governance structures, benchmarks and ownership agreements that align the preferences of state and corporate actors thereby limiting the scope for rent-seeking behavior and strategic failures (Bailey et al, 2015: 176–177; Barca, 2012: 148; Block, 2008: 172; Cowling and Tomlinson, 2011: 847; Maggor, 2021; Mazzucato, 2015; Oqubay, 2020; Schrank and Kurtz, 2005). Crucially, these rules should establish mechanisms to enforce discipline when corporate actors fail to meet performance benchmarks (Maggor, 2021). The intrinsically unbalanced power relationship between governments and large corporations means that success stories of biting conditionality and effective enforcement (Maggor, 2021) will be less frequent than instances in which corporate short-termism prevails due to bad policy design (Bailey and Tomlinson, 2017).…”