Structural Adjustment in AfricaBonnie K. Campbell, John Loxley Providing overviews of states and sectors, classes and companies in the new international division of labour, this series treats polity-economy dialectics at global, regional and national levels. This volume in the series looks at the complexities of structural adjustment in Africa. |
Contents
The Devaluation Debate in Tanzania | 13 |
The World Bank and the IMF in Zimbabwe | 37 |
The IMF The World Bank and Reconstruction in Uganda | 67 |
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40 per cent adjustment policies adjustment programme Africa agricultural balance of payments basic budget Cameroon capital cocoa coffee commercialisation comparative advantage constraints costs Côte-d'Ivoire countries crisis crops debt service decline deficit deterioration devaluation domestic economic policy effect exchange rate expenditure export external favour financing fiscal foreign exchange Fund Ghana Ghanaian growth impact implemented imports incentives income increase industrial sector inflation initial institutions investment Istiqlal Ivorian Ivory Coast Jansen labour liberalisation loans Madagascar major Malgache measures ment million monetary Moroccan Morocco Mousgoum official organised particular peasants PNDC political problems producer prices production public sector recovery reduce reform restructuring result rice Semry situation social stabilisation strategy structural adjustment subsidies Tanzania tion tonnes Toupouri trade Uganda UNFP urban wage weak workers World Bank world market Yagoua Zimbabwe Zimbabwe's