This contributed volume examines development efforts in
sub-Saharan Africa and the role privatization and foreign
investment can play. The focus is on African and international
capital mobility and recent experience in private investment in
contemporary African states. While government in Africa continues
to have a hand in economic and political matters, private
enterprise, private investment, and market forces are becoming
increasingly active. The volume reveals these new directions in
development practice in Africa and analyzes the difficulties which
government, while well-intended, has created in the past.
Contributors from the United States and Africa pose questions
and examine scenarios for investment in sub-Saharan Africa. And
while no single strategy is agreed upon, they provide overwhelming
evidence that it has been the failure of prior central policies
which has held these nations back, and that hope for the 1990's
lies in the unleashing of the private sector. This work will be of
interest to scholars and policy-makers in development economics,
international trade and finance, and African studies.
General
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