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The World Bank and African Poverty, 1973–91

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

Since 1987–8 the World Bank, together with other donors, has been engaged in a programme of activities known as ‘Social Dimensions of Adjustment’ (S.D.A.). This is the latest in a line of ‘pro-poor’ initiatives which the organisation has sponsored over the last two decades. This article analyses the Bank's succession of policies against the background of the changing political and economic world situation, as well as alternative policy agendas.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1992

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References

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16 List of conditions attached to Pamscad, cited in Jolly, ‘Poverty and Adjustment in the 1990s’, p. 168.

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48 According to the Confederation of Zimbabwean Industry, the most that would be raised by such school fees was Z$80 million, as against a budget deficit of Z$1,400 million, while the effects on levels of workforce literacy and numeracy were potentially grave. See L. Sachikonye, ‘Structural Adjustment and Organized Labour in Zimbabwe’, Scandinavian Institute of African Studies Workshop, Harare, 1992.

49 SDA Activity Report, pp. 2–4.

50 Ibid. p. 3.

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