Sustainable Growth in the African Economy

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AA Curve
Africa
African Industrialisation
African Low Income Country
African manufacturing labour dynamics
appropriate technology adoption
Author_Jeffrey James
Capital Intensive Alternatives
Capital Labour Ratio
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Category=KCM
Chinese FDI
Demand Curve
dual economy model
Dual Economy Perspective
Economics
Economy
Employment
EPZs
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eq_business-finance-law
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Gdp Growth
Global
Global Innovation System
Growth
Growth Escalator
Human Development Index
Indian Pharmaceutical Industry
Induced Innovation Model
Inequality
Labour
Labour Intensive
Labour Intensive Alternatives
Labour Intensive Techniques
Labour Intensive Technologies
Labour Intensive Units
labour-intensive industrialisation
Lewis Model
Lewis Turning Point
Manufacturing Branch
Policy
Risk
Small Scale Firms
Small Scale Sector
structural economic change
Successful East Asian Countries
Sustainable
technological capability building
Technology
Trade
underemployment in Africa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367877781
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The current growth path in sub-Saharan Africa is not following the Lewis model where labour moves from low-productivity agriculture to higher productivity manufacturing. Instead, it is moving directly to inappropriate (import and labour-saving) methods. This book seeks to show how this distorted growth process leaves out the major resource of these countries – labour – and ends up creating unstable employment and underemployment, leading to inequality and poverty. In this way it demonstrates how the entire growth process may be rendered unstable and unsustainable.

Sustainable Growth in the African Economy considers whether the relatively rapid growth of recent years can be maintained or improved upon, with a focus on the process of industrialisation. Basing itself on a well-known dual-economy model, the proposed book focuses on several major problems of industrialisation, which has long been seen as the means of structural change in an economy which begins from a low income level. The book considers how the future trajectory of sub-Saharan Africa compares to recent success stories on other continents, and explains how factors such as rapid population growth and capital and import-intensive technology in manufacturing could foreshadow future social and political problems.

This book will be essential reading to students and policymakers who are concerned with the existing pattern of African growth.

Jeffrey James is Emeritus Professor of Development Economics at Tilburg University, the Netherlands.

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