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7 - The international politics of economic failure

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 October 2009

Christopher Clapham
Affiliation:
Lancaster University
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Summary

The failure of African economies

By far the most important factor underlying the international weakness of African states, and their vulnerability to internal fragmentation and external penetration, was their record of economic failure. The trajectories of different groups of Third World states since 1960, and notably the contrast between the capitalist states of east and south-east Asia on the one hand, and the states of sub-Saharan Africa on the other, provided the clearest indicator of the roles of economic success in ensuring political autonomy and diplomatic respect, and of stagnation and decay in leading to dependence on the uncertain and conditional charity of Western donor states and international institutions. There was, of course, no one-way causal relationship between economic failure and political weakness. The structure of African statehood certainly contributed to the dismal record of African economies, just as the structure of African involvement in global production and trade helped to induce political alienation and institutional decay. The economic and political crises of African statehood could most plausibly be regarded as different facets of a common complex of problems. From the early 1980s onwards, however, these problems were most clearly reflected in the economic needs of African states, and their subjection to the conditions imposed by external donors as the price for meeting those needs, which in turn became the overriding preoccupation of Africa's external relations.

Any attempt to quantify the economic failure of African states over the third of a century or so after most of them became independent is subject to the reliability of statistics which were affected by the same processes of institutional decay as the economies which they purported to describe.

Type
Chapter
Information
Africa and the International System
The Politics of State Survival
, pp. 163 - 186
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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