Structural adjustment and reproduction of dependency in African countries, 1980s–1990s.
- Authors: Osuji K.C.1
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Affiliations:
- Issue: No 4 (2025)
- Pages: 398-407
- Section: Articles
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/2454-0617/article/view/366978
- EDN: https://elibrary.ru/WLEDAR
- ID: 366978
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Abstract
During the transformative decades of the 1980s and 1990s, structural adjustment programs (SAPs) became a significant driving force on the African continent, heralding economic stabilization. However, these initiatives often led to sustained poverty and a legacy of dependency, creating dynamics that continue to shape the trajectory of Africa's future. The study delves into the complex dynamics of global financial governance, particularly as it is based on conditional lending mechanisms and administered by institutions like the IMF and the World Bank. It examines the interrelationship of these structures with the fragile frameworks of postcolonial institutions, which ultimately influence the operational capacity of African states. This research employs a comparative-historical approach, combining information drawn from archival documents, testimonies from prominent figures, and analysis of macroeconomic indicators. The study utilizes Bretton Woods technical documents and national archives from Angola, Algeria, Côte d'Ivoire, Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo), and Angola. The dependency reproduction model illustrates how conditionality creates long-term structural constraints, and data from the African Development Bank and World Development Indicators (2024) confirm this. The findings reveal a paradoxical factor: while SAPs achieved short-term stabilization, they simultaneously dismantled industrial policy, reduced real wages, and further tethered the economy to volatile raw commodities. Ghana's reformist zeal did not lead to diversification; rural incomes in Côte d'Ivoire declined; Zaire perfected "executive discipline," undermining institutions; rentier experiments in Algeria and Angola failed due to partial reforms. Ultimately, the study argues that SAPs reinforce dependency by limiting political autonomy and institutionalizing external oversight. The implications of this are clear: restoring financial sovereignty in the region, revitalizing industrial policy, ensuring debt transparency, and incorporating social protection into the budgeting system are essential steps toward breaking the vicious cycle of restructuring and dependency.
About the authors
Kingsley Chibueze Osuji
Email: kingsleyc05@gmail.com
ORCID iD: 0009-0004-7185-2355
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