布雷顿森林机构和非洲经济改革

A. Akinola
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引用次数: 0

摘要

国际货币基金组织(货币基金组织)和世界银行(包括布雷顿森林机构)在非洲的活动继续引起有关经济改革对民主化和经济增长的影响的问题。布雷顿森林机构坚决认为,经济增长对减轻贫穷的努力作出了重大贡献,从而提高了生活水平,特别是在发展中国家,包括非洲国家。在1980年代中期,当许多非洲国家努力偿还外债并有资格获得额外信贷以向其公民提供服务并促进经济增长和发展时,世界银行和国际货币基金组织提出帮助它们。然而,布雷顿森林机构的援助以每个非洲国家是否愿意进行必要的结构改革为条件,这些改革包括减少公共部门,使本国货币贬值,解除对外贸部门的管制,以及更多地依靠市场来分配资源。这些援助计划后来被称为结构调整计划(SAPs),包括向处于经济危机中的非洲国家提供有条件的贷款。当时,世界银行认为,其在非洲和世界其他地区的发展项目的有效性正在受到臃肿和功能失调的官僚结构和政府系统的破坏,这些官僚结构和政府系统普遍敌视市场,特别是敌视企业家精神。世界银行希望以体制改革作为向非洲国家提供信贷的条件,据说是为了提高官僚效率和经济业绩,并提高世界银行在这些国家的项目的效力。因此,国际货币基金组织和世界银行在20世纪90年代成为努力改善非洲经济增长和发展的主要参与者。预期这些方案将改善宏观经济业绩,促进经济迅速增长,实现经济多样化,并向每个非洲国家提供对付贫穷和提高国民生活水平所需的资源。事实上,在1994年,世界银行对结构调整方案对非洲经济的影响表示非常乐观。然而,许多批评人士认为,sap对非洲经济的宏观经济表现实际上没有任何积极影响,相反,它造成了一系列内部政治和经济矛盾,这些矛盾至今仍在困扰着非洲大陆。因此,批评人士说,许多实施了sap的国家继续遭受高度贫困的折磨,并且比他们参与布雷顿森林机构及其调整计划之前更加依赖外部财政资源(如贷款、发展援助和粮食援助)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Bretton Woods Institutions and Economic Reform in Africa
The activities of International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (together comprising the Bretton Woods Institutions) in Africa have continued to generate questions about the impact of economic reforms on democratization and economic growth. The Bretton Woods Institutions strongly believe that economic growth contributes significantly to poverty alleviation efforts and hence generates improvements in living standards, particularly in developing countries, including those in Africa. In the mid-1980s, as many African countries struggled to service their external debts and qualify for additional credit to provide services to their citizens and promote economic growth and development, the World Bank and the IMF offered to help them. However, the Bretton Woods Institutions conditioned their assistance on the willingness of each African country to undertake necessary structural reforms, which included a reduction in the public sector, devaluation of the national currency, deregulation of the foreign trade sector, and more reliance on markets for the allocation of resources. These aid programs, which came to be known as Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs) consisted of conditional lending to African countries in economic crisis. At this time, the World Bank felt that the effectiveness of its development programs in Africa and other regions of the world was being undermined by bloated and dysfunctional bureaucratic structures and governmental systems that were hostile to the market generally and entrepreneurship in particular. The World Bank’s desire to condition the extension of credit to African countries on institutional reforms was supposedly to improve bureaucratic efficiency, as well as economic performance, and enhance the effectiveness of the World Bank’s projects in these countries. Thus, the IMF and the World Bank emerged in the 1990s as major players in efforts to improve economic growth and development in Africa. The SAPs were expected to improve macroeconomic performance, produce rapid economic growth, achieve economic diversification, and provide each African country with the resources that it needed to confront poverty and improve national living standards. In fact, in 1994, the World Bank expressed a lot of optimism about the impact of SAPs on African economies. However, many critics have argued that SAPs had virtually no positive impact on the macroeconomic performance of African economies and, instead, created a series of internal political and economic contradictions that have continued to haunt the continent to this day. As a result, critics say, many countries that implemented SAPs continue to suffer from high levels of poverty and became more dependent on external financial resources (such as loans, development aid, and food aid) than before they got involved with the Bretton Woods Institutions and their adjustment programs.
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