Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:371Hits:19886909Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID189938
Title ProperChina, Africa and the International Aid System
Other Title Informationa Challenge to (the Norms Underpinning) the Neoliberal World Order?
LanguageENG
AuthorGilpin, Shaquille Ifedayo
Summary / Abstract (Note)The China–Africa relationship has received increased interest over the past few decades as scholars critically examine the challenge that China, in its quest for a closer strategic partnership with Africa, poses to the norms governing the neoliberal world order (NLWO). One crucial aspect of this is international aid, and how Chinese aid to Africa differs from Western aid. This paper argues that Chinese aid reduces the power of traditional aid donors to shape the development route of African countries. This new development finance ultimately breaks the monopoly of Western aid to decide how poor countries in the global ‘South’ develop. In doing so, the Sino–African aid relationship is challenging the current world order as it offers African states the possibility to decouple (or delink) themselves from the global economy. By challenging assumed neoliberal economic development fundamentals, this relationship, if harnessed correctly by African leaders, can pose longer-term ideological questions around the very set of ideas that underpin development itself, while enabling African states the policy space needed to pursue more sustainable development from an Afro-centric perspective. It is this possibility to delink, due to changing ideological fundamentals concerning economic development, that is the challenge China and Africa pose to the NLWO.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Asian and African Studies vol. 58, No.3; May 2023: p.277-297
Journal SourceJournal of Asian and African Studies 2023-04 58, 3
Key WordsAfrica ;  China ;  Neoliberal ;  Development Finance ;  Decoupling ;  Monopoly ;  Development Effectiveness ;  International Aid System ;  Delinking ;  World Systems ;  Neoliberal World Order