2014
DOI: 10.1080/03056244.2014.996323
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From a marginalised to an emerging Africa? A critical analysis

Abstract: At the end of the twentieth century, Africa was described as ‘marginalised’. Nowadays, the continent is considered as ‘emerging’. The aim of this paper is to discuss the validity of this new perception of Africa's position in the global economy. By critically re-evaluating existing empirical data, the author will attempt to show that the emergence thesis is superficial and does not take into account the current nature of economic growth in Africa and the cost it implies in terms of net income payments to the r… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Our own analytical contribution to this effort suggests that the resilience-centred vision of African progress that guides the Africa Climate Business Plan mirrors the traditional conceptions of development from the past, and is unlikely to enable the continent to, in the words of the Bank (World Bank 2015, p. 3), 'deliver on its promises'. While playing into the widely popularised if fundamentally inadequate 'Africa rising' narrative (Sylla 2014, Pillay 2015, Beresford 2016, Taylor 2016a, the Bank's self-proclaimed mission to strengthen, power and enable resilience does not offer the continent anything new beyond a shift in discourse.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our own analytical contribution to this effort suggests that the resilience-centred vision of African progress that guides the Africa Climate Business Plan mirrors the traditional conceptions of development from the past, and is unlikely to enable the continent to, in the words of the Bank (World Bank 2015, p. 3), 'deliver on its promises'. While playing into the widely popularised if fundamentally inadequate 'Africa rising' narrative (Sylla 2014, Pillay 2015, Beresford 2016, Taylor 2016a, the Bank's self-proclaimed mission to strengthen, power and enable resilience does not offer the continent anything new beyond a shift in discourse.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It emphasised Africa's economic growth and increasing foreign direct investment, 43 as well as the region's favourable demographics and increasing purchasing power of its emerging middle class. 44 onwards. Combined with a failure to turn sustained economic growth into significant diversification of national economies, the sharp loss of export earnings for Africa's many commodity-dependent economies, and in particular the oil-exporting ones, has become a serious threat to the continent's overall economic progress.…”
Section: Africa Rising and Fallingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Relations of dependence, structured by re-iterations of colonial configurations of production, reproduction and exchange, continue to shape processes of development in the Global South. For instance, the growth underpinning the "Africa rise" phenomenon has been mostly jobless but was accompanied by a significant increase in the income payments made by African economies to the rest of the world in the form of primary income on foreign direct investment (Sylla 2014). Furthermore, the participation of Global South firms in global supply chains enables new forms of economic imperialism.…”
Section: Through the Covid-19 Magnifying Glassmentioning
confidence: 99%