« Back to Results

Power, Finance and Development in Africa, and Issues in Development

Paper Session

Friday, Jan. 5, 2024 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM (CST)

Marriott Riverwalk, Bonham
Hosted By: Association for Evolutionary Economics & Association for Social Economics
  • Chair: Geoffrey Schneider, Bucknell University

Africa and the Global Financial System: Critical Perspectives

Howard Stein
,
University of Michigan

Abstract

Sub-Saharan Africa is again in a debt crisis. Debt to exports now exceed more than 200% to levels not seen for nearly 20 years. The joint World Bank and IMF Debt Sustainability Analysis lists 21 countries in SSA in distress or with a high risk for debt distress. The multiple debt crises of African countries in the post-independence period are a symptom of the nature of the international financial architecture at the core of 21st century capitalism. The key characteristic of the global financial architecture is the hierarchy of currencies that has helped define a country’s standing in the global order. African countries find themselves at the bottom of the hierarchy with currencies that are unstable with no international circulation and are under constant pressure to accumulate dollars. The paper documents the development of the global financial system. Following a period of uncertainty after the collapse of Bretton Woods, neoliberalism and financialization pushed by the growing concentration of global wealth helped institutionalize a new system of dollar hegemony. The hierarchy of currencies and financial subordination of African countries are part of the same dynamic that generates dollar hegemony. However, hegemony does not simply arise out of unfettered raw power but is legitimized by the concatenating impact of common constructs and ideologies among policy makers that believe in the naturalism of the currency order. At the same time key players with power, resources and influence financially gain from the system. The structural weaknesses of African countries and the system that generates financial subordination are linked through cumulative causation. The ability to break out of the system requires the development of a new set of constructs that both understands the sources of power that perpetuates the system and identifies where that power can be contested.

The China Railway Construction Corporation (CRCC) and African Development

Alicia Girón
,
National Autonomous University of Mexico

Abstract

To talk about Africa's economic development without referring to infrastructure investments made by large Chinese corporations would be to deny the changes in international cooperation between the countries of the Global South. An economic and political project of the People's Republic of China, whose strength base has been a ‘Big Government and Big Bank’ accompanied by economic and financial reforms and a long-term imperial vision, central hypothesis in Minsky's work that underline the importance of public companies and the exercise of a monetary and fiscal policy focused on employment creation with a significant expansion of capital exports. The Great International Financial Crisis (GIFC) strengthened under the Belt Road Initiative (BRI) along with a social reproduction process of the State capital with a long-term global vision explains the great Chinese corporations. In this essay, we will demonstrate the positioning and growth of large Chinese corporations, interrelated with profound economic and financial reforms in China since the 1980s. Firstly, the focus will be the investments of China Railway Construction Corporation (CRCC) globally; secondly, there will be a brief account of the investment projects on the African continent; lastly, we will pay particular attention to the institutional investors participating in the CRCC.

Corruption and African Development: A Critical Assessment

Geoffrey Schneider
,
Bucknell University

Abstract

Corruption is often used by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund as a catch-all excuse to condemn state-led development in Africa. Like the worst of mainstream economics theorizing, the anti-state, anti-corruption stance assumes that corruption, especially the petty corruption of state officials, is an inherent inhibitor of economic development. But, as is so often the case with mainstream theorizing, the realities on the ground can be very different. The U.S. experienced some of its most rapid economic growth during the extremely corrupt robber baron era. South Korea’s economic boom was built on cozy government-firm relationships that would be perceived as corrupt under many definitions. Interestingly, corruption can sometimes facilitate development under certain circumstances, such as when the rents from corruption end up being reinvested productively in the domestic economy. Building on Phil O’Hara’s 2014 paper, “Political Economy of Systemic and Micro-Corruption Throughout the World,” Journal of Economic Issues, 48, 2, this paper argues that neoliberal policies foisted on sub-Saharan Africa by the World Bank and the IMF actually facilitate particularly types of systemic corruption, which O’Hara (2014: 303) defines as “the abuse of power for private benefit against the common good based on the actions of bribery, fraud, extortion, embezzlement, state capture, nepotism, and others.” In particular, neoliberal policies foster corporate corruption, uneven development, and the systematic and corrupt exploitation of Africa’s resources and people.

Supply Chain Economics: A Fresh Lens for Holistic Analysis

Larry Wigger
,
University of Missouri-Kansas City

Abstract

Idiosyncratic shocks, such as the Covid-19 pandemic and Russian invasion of Ukraine, are catalysts for wide-spread disruption to economies, firms, and households. We find these crises accelerating pre-existing trends, so it is critical we consider historical contexts. Aging workforces, declining birth rates, promotion of 4-year degrees, stigmatization of blue-collar work, geographically, hyper-concentrated supply chains have all been in the making for decades. Organizations are heavily investing in automation technologies and continuing foreign direct investment in offshore sourcing of critical natural resources. There are real geo-political concerns on this in Africa and Asia, such as dominance in rare earth minerals and semiconductor fabrication. Supply chain management is the management of a network of organizations, internal and external, by which an organization pursues its goals and objectives. Yet neither the social science of economics or decision science of supply chain management proved sufficient to anticipate the depth, breadth, or duration of these disruptions, much less mitigate the damage. So, from those definitions we frame supply chain economics. By combining these concepts, we understand supply chain economics as the systematic study of the production, distribution, and consumption of goods, services, and capital by networks of organizations, internal and external, with which any given organization pursues its goals and objectives.

Interrogating Theories of Power within Original Institutionalist Thought

Jacob Powell
,
Bucknell University

Abstract

This article interrogates different theoretical approaches to power implicit and explicit within the Original Institutionalist literature. Steven Lukes’, Power: A Radical View, lays out a three-dimensional typography within which different theoretical approaches to power can be located. The first dimension is a pluralist conception of power emblematic in the works of Robert Dahl, focusing on behavior and decision making in overt observable conflict. The second dimension of power is represented in C. Wright Mills’ Power Elite, moving beyond the first dimension, focusing on decision and non-decision making in both covert and overt conflict. The third dimension of power, associated with the Post-Structuralist social theory and embodied in terms such as hegemony (Gramsci), micro-physics of power (Foucault), and symbolic power (Bourdieu), is often referred to as “subjectless” power. This approach focuses on power embedded in institutions, habits of thought, often influencing events and decisions at the pre-reflexive level. Original Institutionalist theorists have fallen into each of these dimensions implicitly or explicitly within their work. This article interrogates some of the major thinkers in Original Institutionalist thought, such as, Veblen, Commons, Galbraith, Boulding, Waller, and Dugger to tease out the different dimensional approaches being taken. The limitations of these dimensional approaches are then highlighted, while articulating their often-incompatible nature. A “subjectless” approach to power will be articulated as the most consistent with the methodological (i.e., ontological and epistemological) commitments of Original Institutionalists. Moreover, by highlighting the compatibility of Original Institutionalist methodology with “subjectless” power a bridge is built between two schools of thought which are often seen as disparate: Original Institutional economics and Post-Structuralist social theory. Such a bridge can help to promote nterdisciplinary understandings of social phenomena.

COVID-19 Pandemic and Cryptocurrency Volatility: An Empirical Analysis

Ben Chalbia Radhouan
,
Higher Institute of Transport Services of Sousse

Abstract

The last three years have been mainly characterized by two significant events. The announcement of the COVID-19 pandemic on March 11, 2020, by the World Health Organization and the beginning of a special operation by Russia in Ukraine on February 24, 2022. This turbulent situation has been highlighted by academic researchers to decipher the reaction of speculators in the cryptocurrency market. The results of scientific research are in favour of the high volatility of crypto assets. We use linear and non-linear ARCH models to study the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic measured by two indicators CASES and DETHS on the performance of nine cryptocurrencies (CARDANO, BNB, BITCOIN, BUSD, DOGECOIN, ETHEREUM, COIN, TETHER, and XRP). The database is daily covering the period from January 22, 2020, to December 14, 2022, collected from the Coin-Desk of the Yahoo.fr website. The results show the presence of a strong information asymmetry in the cryptocurrency market during this turbulent period stimulating Crypto assets instability. Cryptocurrency speculators prefer to diversify their portfolios by holding safer Cryptos with low payouts and a basket of more risky famous Cryptos.
JEL Classifications
  • B5 - Current Heterodox Approaches
  • O1 - Economic Development