Business and the state in Southern Africa : the politics of economic reform

書誌事項

Business and the state in Southern Africa : the politics of economic reform

Scott D. Taylor

Lynne Rienner, 2007

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 235-251) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Why are productive, development-supporting relations between business and government still so rare in Africa? Scott Taylor addresses this question, examining state-business coalitions as they emerge, and endure or collapse, in three representative countries: Zambia, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. Taylor illuminates three possible trajectories: an abortive state-business coalition, as in Zambia; the emergence of a short-lived coalition, as in Zimbabwe; and a relatively successful and thus far durable coalition, as in South Africa. Though rooted in the southern African experience, his cases reflect much of the variance in outcomes throughout sub-Saharan Africa and shed light on the prospects for economic reform and development on the continent. It explores why state-business coalitions emerge (or do not) in Africa, and why they endure or collapse, drawing on three representative case studies.

目次

Business and the State. Explaining the Origins and Fate of Business-State Coalitions. Business-State Cooperation in Zambia: Rhetoric and Realities. From Partnership to Enmity: Business, the State, and Economic Collapse in Zimbabwe. South Africa: Both Model and Cautionary Tale? Crafting Business-State Coalitions: Lessons For, and From, Southern Africa.

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