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Economic Conditions in Africa, Foreign Economic Relations - General & miscellaneous, Monetary Policy, Structural Adjustment, Ghana - History, International Financial Industries, Economic Policies in Africa, Africa - Business, Economics, & Finance
Adjusting Society by L. Brydon,Karen Legge β€” book cover

Adjusting Society

by L. Brydon, Karen Legge
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Overview

Since 1983 Ghana has become a test case of the efficacy of the World Bank and the IMF's stabilization and adjustment-based lending policies. The government has "bitten the IMF bullet" with a vengeance, with deregulated currency, liberalized trade, slimmed down state-owned enterprises and strengthened bureaucracies as prescribed by the lending institutions. In terms of compliance, Ghana has been a model patient. The outcomes of the policies are, however, only beginning to be documented.

This study looks at the lives of Ghanaian men and women after almost ten years of adjustment and reveals adjustment and its concomitant effects as part of a continuous and ongoing process within the contemporary history and development of Ghana. District, regional and national perspectives are also woven into the picture, giving both wider macro- and more qualitative emphases.

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Editorials

Booknews

This anthropological study compares the instrumental visions of the IMF and World Bank's view of Ghana as an exemplar of the new modern African state, with the experiences and world-views of selected rural and urban populations. This text is the first major published output from a project funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (UK) begun in 1990. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
December 31, 1996
Publisher
London ; Tauris Academic Studies ; 1996.
Pages
222
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781860640001

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