

An edition of Structural adjustment reconsidered (1997)
economic policy and poverty in Africa
By David E. Sahn
Publish Date
1997
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
eng
Pages
304
Description:
The often emotional debate over the impact of structural adjustment on the poor in Africa has been confused by the complexity of economic reforms and their inconsistent implementation, the diversity of prior conditions, and confounding effects of external shocks. Going beyond simple "before and after" comparisons, Professors Sahn, Dorosh, and Younger isolate from other factors the effect of specific policy measures associated with adjustment programs. The analysis draws primarily on the experience of ten African countries: Cameroon, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Niger, Tanzania, and Zaire. It combines description of policy reforms and survey data, and quantitative simulations using multimarket and computable general equilibrium (CGE) models. The authors suggest that contrary to common belief, adjustment policies - in particular trade and exchange rate, fiscal, and agricultural reforms - do not harm the poor in Africa. Reforms in fact usually benefit the poor slightly, but alone are insufficient to reduce poverty significantly.
subjects: Economic policy, Poverty, Structural adjustment (Economic policy), 83.32 economic policy, Subsaharan Africa, Economische stabiliteit, Ajustement structurel (politique économique), Strukturanpassungspolitik, Armoede, Taux de change, Afrique subsaharienne, Economische hervormingen, Structurele aanpassing (ontwikkelingseconomie), Ajustement structurel, Analyse comparative, Politique fiscale, Politique économique, Pauvreté, Agriculture, Africa, sub-saharan, politics and government
Places: Sub-Saharan Africa