Inclusive Globalization or Old Wine in a New Bottle? China-Led Globalization in Sub-Saharan Africa

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Date

2022

Authors

Verkhovets, Stepan
Karaoguz, H. Emrah

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Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd

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Abstract

This article questions whether China's economic initiatives lead to 'inclusive globalization' or tend to sustain the distributional inequalities of neoliberal globalization in the context of sub-Saharan Africa. It argues that many considerations, including China's so-called 'no strings attached' policy and lending behaviour, unfavourable trade relations, concentration of Chinese investments in a few sectors, and limited technology and knowledge transfer, cast doubt on the realization of inclusive globalization. Even though economic relations with China may foster economic growth and provide short-term relief to the poor, which is also conditioned by the recipient countries' degree of state capacity, it is questionable to what degree these relations lead to sustainable pro-poor development. No matter what the underlying political economy explanation is (China's motivations and approach to globalization, weak state capacities in sub-Saharan Africa, structural impediments to development), it is misleading to conclude that China-driven economic globalization is inclusive.

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One Belt, Road, Politics, East, Aid, China-led globalization, One Belt, neoliberal globalization, Road, inclusive globalization, Politics, pro-poor development, East, inclusive development, Aid, sub-Saharan Africa

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3

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Source

Globalizations

Volume

19

Issue

8

Start Page

1195

End Page

1210