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- | Alternative Adjustment Programmes | + | ====== |
Based on Ch 8.5 of **Robert Lensink, 1996, // | Based on Ch 8.5 of **Robert Lensink, 1996, // | ||
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The alternative adjustment programmes presented in the 1980s and early 1990s can be considered derivatives of the structuralist position. | The alternative adjustment programmes presented in the 1980s and early 1990s can be considered derivatives of the structuralist position. | ||
- | ^ Neoliberal adjustment programme | + | ^ Neoliberal adjustment programme |
- | ^ Agricultural Policy | + | ^ Agricultural Policy |
- | | **Market-based pricing and free trade** | + | | **Market-based pricing and free trade** |
| Emphasis on creating unfettered markets by removing government interference. Achieved by: eliminating marketing boards, subsidies, tariffs, and by currency devaluation to make agriculture for export more competitive. | Government actively promotes the agricultural sector but the purpose of agricultural development is to improve the position of women and peasants. Therefore priority policies include: land reform, improvement of access to agricultural inputs and credit for peasants and women, stabilisation of prices. | | | Emphasis on creating unfettered markets by removing government interference. Achieved by: eliminating marketing boards, subsidies, tariffs, and by currency devaluation to make agriculture for export more competitive. | Government actively promotes the agricultural sector but the purpose of agricultural development is to improve the position of women and peasants. Therefore priority policies include: land reform, improvement of access to agricultural inputs and credit for peasants and women, stabilisation of prices. | | ||
- | ^ Industrial Policy | + | ^ Industrial Policy |
- | | **Removal of government from industrial policy** | + | | **Removal of government from industrial policy** |
| The government has no place making structural decisions about which industries should be promoted and developed -- it will inevitably make worse decisions than the market, reducing the productive capacity of the economy. | Frequently the development of one sector is hampered by a lack of linked sectors -- there are externalities which require multiple industries to develop simultaneously. Policies: improvement of social and physical infrastructure in rural areas, improvement of education, promotion of small-scale and labour intensive industry which can make use of locally-produced raw materials, especially by providing credit facilities where none exist. | | | The government has no place making structural decisions about which industries should be promoted and developed -- it will inevitably make worse decisions than the market, reducing the productive capacity of the economy. | Frequently the development of one sector is hampered by a lack of linked sectors -- there are externalities which require multiple industries to develop simultaneously. Policies: improvement of social and physical infrastructure in rural areas, improvement of education, promotion of small-scale and labour intensive industry which can make use of locally-produced raw materials, especially by providing credit facilities where none exist. | | ||
- | ^ Social Safety Nets || | + | ^ Social Safety Nets || |
- | | **Shock therapy** | + | | **Shock therapy** |
| Mitigation of the costs of adjustment to vulnerable groups will generally only serve to slow adjustment, reduce its gains and prolong the pain ultimately caused. A reduction of safety nets will improve incentives, speed adjustment and minimise long-run pain. | The most vulnerable groups in society must be targeted for particular support through adjustment: considering the suffering of these groups as the ' | | Mitigation of the costs of adjustment to vulnerable groups will generally only serve to slow adjustment, reduce its gains and prolong the pain ultimately caused. A reduction of safety nets will improve incentives, speed adjustment and minimise long-run pain. | The most vulnerable groups in society must be targeted for particular support through adjustment: considering the suffering of these groups as the ' | ||
- | | International Trade | | + | ^ |
- | | **Unification and abolition of trade barriers** | + | | **Unification and abolition of trade barriers** |
- | | Quotas should be replaced with tariffs, which should be | simplified, reduced, and ultimately abolished. The infant industry argument is, in practice, flawed and merely favours a domestic industry and labour aristocracy at the expense of the domestic consumers. | The infant industry argument is accepted, but protection should involve tariffs not quotas, should protect industries not firms and where possible should protect a region (such as SSA) rather than a country (although this can prove politically difficult). Devaluations are supported (provided they are accompanied by policy aimed at improving production capacity and income distribution) in support of an increase in the volume and variety of export goods. | | + | | Quotas should be replaced with tariffs, which should be simplified, reduced, and ultimately abolished. The infant industry argument is, in practice, flawed and merely favours a domestic industry and labour aristocracy at the expense of the domestic consumers. | The infant industry argument is accepted, but protection should involve tariffs not quotas, should protect industries not firms and where possible should protect a region (such as SSA) rather than a country (although this can prove politically difficult). Devaluations are supported (provided they are accompanied by policy aimed at improving production capacity and income distribution) in support of an increase in the volume and variety of export goods. | |