Aid and Power: v.1: World Bank and Policy Based Lending: Vol 1

Aid and Power: v.1: World Bank and Policy Based Lending: Vol 1

by Jane Harrigan & John Toye Edited by Paul Mosley (Author)

Synopsis

The international recession of the early 1980s left many less developed countries in a precarious position as their exports demised, private capital flows were sharply reduced and interest rates rose. Major aid donors, in particular The World Bank, responded with a revolution in aid policy - the introduction of structural adjustment lending. Financial flows to developing countries were increasingly accompanied by demands for changes in policy, generally of a type that reduced the level of government intervention in the economy. This book examines what this has meant, both for The World Bank and for the recipients of aid. The bargaining process determining the level of aid and the conditions attached to it has become more complicated and, in practice, The World Bank has not been in as strong a position as might be imagined. The Bank has been keen to disburse the money which is available to it in the form of aid and to implement its conditions; recipient countries have frequently only been keen to receive the money. If the Bank retaliates when its conditions are not met by withholding money in the future, it threatens its ability to disburse aid. This book should be of interest to lecturers and students of development economics, international relations and the politics of development.

$3.54

Save:$21.03 (86%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: London & New York: Routledge
Published: 01 Jan 1991

ISBN 10: 0415015480
ISBN 13: 9780415015486