<p><span>This book discusses the role played by powerful global institutions such as the IMF, the World Bank, the World Trade Organisation, multinational corporations, and the international credit rating agencies in keeping Africa marginalised in the world economy. The book focuses on the intrusive
Africa in the Global Economy: Capital Flight, Enablers, and Decolonial Responses (Advances in African Economic, Social and Political Development)
â Scribed by Gorden Moyo
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 192
- Edition
- 2024
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
⌠Synopsis
This book discusses the role played by powerful global institutions such as the IMF, the World Bank, the World Trade Organisation, multinational corporations, and the international credit rating agencies in keeping Africa marginalised in the world economy. The book focuses on the intrusive roles of these institutions as enablers and beneficiaries of capital outflows and financial subordination in Africa. Diverging from the official narrative that touts China and the other emerging economies as global reformers that are poised to partner Africa in its fight against financial subjugation, the book instead argues that, like the Western powers, the emerging economies are benefiting prodigiously from a rigged global financial system that keeps Africa as a net creditor to the rest of the world. The book draws its theoretical framework from the repressed heterodox theories including dependency, core-periphery, world systems and Marxist theories as well as the decolonial approach. It concludes with a call for a decolonial African agency that should champion an epistemic rebellion against the neo-liberal and neo-classic economic traditions that have been historically deployed to justify Africaâs subordinated position in the global economic governance.
This book comes at moment in time when Africa is ready to become a Rule Maker not a Rule Taker. The analysis Dr. Moyo presents having been in the front line of public policy and international negotiations demonstrate the need for Africa to re-write the rules to foster our own Transformation.
Jason Rosario Braganza, Executive Director, African Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD)
⌠Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
About the Book
Contents
About the Author
Abbreviations and Acronyms
Chapter 1: Introduction: Entrapment of Africa in an Asymmetrical Global Economy
Introduction
The Rigged Global Financial Architecture
Paradox of Wealth and Poverty
Global Coloniality
Financial Liberalisation
Outline of the Chapters
References
Chapter 2: Multinational Corporations and Tax Havens as Beneficiaries of a Shadow Financial System
Introduction
Shadow Financial System
Spotlighting the Tax Havens
Multinational Corporations (MNCs)
Implications of MNCs-Tax Havens
Lukewarm Global Responses
Towards Delinking Approaches
Conclusion
References
Chapter 3: World Bank, IMF, and WTO as Agents of Financial Imperialism
Introduction
Gatekeepers of Global Capitalism
Agents of Capital Flight
âReforming the Global Financial Institutionsâ
A Decolonial Turn
Conclusion
References
Chapter 4: The Tyranny of International Credit Rating Agencies (ICRAs)
Introduction
International Credit Rating Agencies in Context
The Logic Behind Expanded Footprint of ICRAs
Politics of Credit Rating Agencies
Global Architecture of Unfairness
Implications of Ratings on African Economies
A Case for a Pan-African Credit Rating Agency (PACRA)
Conclusion
References
Chapter 5: Global Financial Subordination and the Pathologies of Sovereign Debt
Introduction
International Financial Subordination
Agents of Financial Subordination and Debt Slavery
The Bane of Debt Servicing
Wrong Diagnosis and Wrong Prescription
Towards a Radical Transformation
Conclusion
References
Chapter 6: Imperial Ecocide and the Bane of Global Climate Finance
Introduction
Imperial Ecocide: Accused Number 1
Imperial Ecocide: Accused Number 2
Global Climate Finance Imperialism
Climate Finance Debt Traps
Cost of Climate Crisis
Contradictions of Global Climate Solutions
Conclusion
References
Chapter 7: Africa and the Age of Global Elite: The Davos Class
Introduction
Global Elites
Global Elite Interconnectedness
The World Economic Forum (WEF)
Davos Class in Africa
Corporate Capture
Towards an Anti-Systemic Global Decolonial Approach
Conclusion
References
Chapter 8: African Elites as Clients of the Offshore World
Introduction
Africaâs Elite in Perspective
Elite Capture and Mechanics of Collaboration
African Elites and the Offshore World
Classic Examples of Elite Corruption
Implications to the Ordinary People
Conclusion
References
Chapter 9: Conclusion: A Canvass for a Decolonial African Agency
Introduction
International Financial Subordination
Contradictions Posed by the Emerged and Emerging Global Powers
Epistemic Delinking and Decolonial Agency
Global Solidarity
Conclusion
References
Index
đ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><span>The book </span><span>Post-Independence Development in Africa: Decolonisation and Transformation Prospects</span><span> revisits the development debates and development realities in Africa. This is achieved by offering theoretical comments about post-independence development in Africa and b
<p><span>This book examines the past, present and prospects of regional economic integration in Africa. The empirical analysis ranges from unions formed during the years following independence, to the proposed African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), which aims to remove trade barriers between
<span>This book examines the implications of Brexit for Africa-UK relations amid a ânew scrambleâ for the continent. Engaging Nkrumah on neo-colonialism and recent scholarship on global coloniality, Langan here underscores concerns that Brexit was fuelled by an imperial romanticism that now gives ri
<span>This book presents a holistic perspective and analysis of democratic practice, processes, and governance in South Africa. It examines the development in the South African governing system and its response to the challenges of the crisis of governance under the influence of the African Peer Rev