Chinese Influence on the African “Resource Curse”

This thesis explores the impact that Chinese aid and investment has on the political economy of resource-rich African countries. In particular, it examines the effects of Chinese resource-for-infrastructure agreements on the political economy of the resource curse. Using Ghana as a case study, this...

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Main Author: Asiedu-Akrofi, Harvey
Other Authors: Trebilcock, Michael
Language:en_ca
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/30168
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-301682013-04-20T05:22:25ZChinese Influence on the African “Resource Curse”Asiedu-Akrofi, HarveyMiningInstitutions0398This thesis explores the impact that Chinese aid and investment has on the political economy of resource-rich African countries. In particular, it examines the effects of Chinese resource-for-infrastructure agreements on the political economy of the resource curse. Using Ghana as a case study, this thesis highlights the peculiar obstacles that countries face with regard to managing their resources. In turn, it argues that general prescriptions against the resource curse, such as resource revenue transparency initiatives, like the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, are insufficient. As a result, African recipients of Chinese aid require specific institutional arrangements that accurately reflect the specific “rules of the game” that exist under their respective political economies. In the case of Ghana, this thesis argues that vetting Chinese resource-for-infrastructure agreements through the Public Procurement Act serves that need.Trebilcock, Michael2011-112011-12-01T18:57:24ZNO_RESTRICTION2011-12-01T18:57:24Z2011-12-01Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/30168en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Mining
Institutions
0398
spellingShingle Mining
Institutions
0398
Asiedu-Akrofi, Harvey
Chinese Influence on the African “Resource Curse”
description This thesis explores the impact that Chinese aid and investment has on the political economy of resource-rich African countries. In particular, it examines the effects of Chinese resource-for-infrastructure agreements on the political economy of the resource curse. Using Ghana as a case study, this thesis highlights the peculiar obstacles that countries face with regard to managing their resources. In turn, it argues that general prescriptions against the resource curse, such as resource revenue transparency initiatives, like the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, are insufficient. As a result, African recipients of Chinese aid require specific institutional arrangements that accurately reflect the specific “rules of the game” that exist under their respective political economies. In the case of Ghana, this thesis argues that vetting Chinese resource-for-infrastructure agreements through the Public Procurement Act serves that need.
author2 Trebilcock, Michael
author_facet Trebilcock, Michael
Asiedu-Akrofi, Harvey
author Asiedu-Akrofi, Harvey
author_sort Asiedu-Akrofi, Harvey
title Chinese Influence on the African “Resource Curse”
title_short Chinese Influence on the African “Resource Curse”
title_full Chinese Influence on the African “Resource Curse”
title_fullStr Chinese Influence on the African “Resource Curse”
title_full_unstemmed Chinese Influence on the African “Resource Curse”
title_sort chinese influence on the african “resource curse”
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/30168
work_keys_str_mv AT asieduakrofiharvey chineseinfluenceontheafricanresourcecurse
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