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ID130214
Title ProperCan African turn from recovery to development
LanguageENG
AuthorMkandawire, Thandika
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)During the last decade or so, Africa, once labeled by the Economist as the "Hopeless Continent," has been rebranded by the same magazine as "Africa Rising." Described by then-British Prime Minister Tony lair in 2001 as "a scar on our consciences," Africa has become the home of "roaring lions" and the "fastest billion"- contrasting with the image of the world's most impoverished "bottom billion," in the words of the economist Paul Collier. These new monikers and the ebullient optimism they reflect are a welcome hange. They have replaced a costly "Afropessimism" that reigned in Western media and academic circles during much of the 1980s and 1990s. The costs of the negative stereotypes of that period were felt not only in terms of Africa's selfesteem but also financially: They depicted Africa as economically much riskier than it ever was and dampened the animal spirits of investors.
`In' analytical NoteCurrent History Vol.113, No.763; May 2014: p.171-178
Journal SourceCurrent History Vol.113, No.763; May 2014: p.171-178
Key WordsSouth Africa ;  Economic Development ;  Hopeless Continent ;  Roaring Lions ;  Selfesteam ;  Negative Stereotypes ;  Economic Investment ;  Financial Cooperation


 
 
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