Antora
Rahman
POLI 480 W
Professor
Shirk
11/20/13
Outline
I.
Thesis Paragraph:
Structural adjustment
programs are policies which are enforced on developing nations—they call for
government austerity and increased privatization while externally they reduce
trade barriers for such countries for foreign investments. While the expected
results should portray the desired economic outcomes, they seem to do exactly
the opposite, creating a wider gap between developed and developing both
domestically and internationally. In the process, countries which are put on
these programs are basically letting the World Bank have the upper hand in
decision-making which in turn seems to strip away the sovereign standing of
such states.
II.
Body Paragraphs:
a.
The World Bank’s origin and background
b.
Its short term and long term goals
c.
Structural adjustment policies and results
d.
How such policies infringe upon the sovereignty on the developing world
III.
Conclusion:
Research has shown that
structural adjustment, rather than fulfilling its intended purposes, makes the
developing world dependent upon the Bank, and in doing so, attacks such nations’
sovereignty. The results are proof that the World Bank needs to move away from
such policies and look towards reform.
IV: Annotated Bibliography:
Danaher, Kevin. 50 Years Is
Enough: The Case against the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund. Boston, MA: South End, 1994. Print.
·
This
book contains criticism which questions the efficiency of the World Bank and
IMF. It discusses issues ranging from policies to inner workings of these
institutions, essentially concluding that they are failing in their mission in
aiding developing countries.
Broad, Robin. Unequal Alliance: The World Bank,
the International Monetary Fund,
and the Philippines.
Berkeley: University of California, 1988.
·
By
using the Phillippines as the primary example, this source provides a specific
analysis of “structural adjustment programs” and their limitations; in
conclusion, these adjustment programs aren’t really good solutions.
Corbo, Vittorio, Morris Goldstein,
and Mohsin S. Khan. Growth-oriented Adjustment
Programs. Washington, D.C.: International Monetary Fund, 1987. Print.
·
This
particular source advocates the reasons why growth programs are key solutions
in tackling Third World debt. It provides a positive outlook on how these
policies can be implemented and build platforms for developing countries’
economic success.
Monetary Fund Influence
Education in Developing Countries." Peabody
Journal of Education 76.3
(2001): 285-338.
·
Education
is an important factor of economic growth in developing countries. This source
analyzes current approaches and involvements of the World Bank and the IMF in
education and what changes/improvements need to be implemented in order to
produce better results.
Brune,
Nancy, Geoffrey Garrett, and Bruce Kogut. "The International Monetary Fund
and
the Global Spread of
Privatization." IMF Staff
Papers 51.2 (2004): 195-219.
·
Unlike
the majority negative criticism of the pure capitalistic backbone of the IMF
and the World Bank, this source discusses the reasons why and how
“privatization” is actually helping developing economies.
Shah, Anup. “Structural Adjustment—a
Major Cause of Poverty.” Global Issues.
24 Mar.
2013. Web. 13 Oct. 2013.
·
Instead
of helping poor countries, structural adjustment is actually causing more
poverty by cutting government spending in half and privatizing more: creating
huge inequality.
Woods, Ngaire. The Globalizers:
The IMF, the World Bank, and Their Borrowers. Ithaca,
NY: Cornell UP, 2006. Print.
·
This
source analyzes the “relationship between political power, economists, and
borrowing governments in the work of the IMF and the World Bank. It sets out to
untangle how politics, ideology, and economics drive them” (Woods 2006).
Stiglitz, Joseph E.
"Democratizing the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank:
Governance and Accountability." Governance 16.1
(2003): 111-39. Wiley Online Library. John Wiley & Sons. Web.
·
Stiglitz
criticizes the IMF for having policies that are counterproductive to its goals
and he uses the World Bank as an exemplary role model for the IMF to follow in
order to be successful.
Easterly, William. "What Did
Structural Adjustment Adjust? The Association of Policies and
Growth with Repeated IMF and World Bank Adjustment
Loans." Journal of Development Economics 76.1 (2005): 1-22. Science
Direct. Elsevier B.V. Web.
·
Repetition
of the same structural adjustment programs on the same countries have shown
that there aren’t any positive outcomes of these programs and that the policies
need to change.
Biersteker, T. J. "Reducing the
Role of the State in the Economy: A Conceptual Exploration of
IMF and World Bank Prescriptions." International
Studies Quarterly 34.4 (1990).
·
This
is another source which looks into the roles of the World Bank and the IMF and
finds that their policies and programs aren’t really “conducive to development”
(Biersteker 1990).
Babb,
Sarah. "The Social Consequences of Structural Adjustment: Recent Evidence
and
Current Debates." Annual Review of Sociology 31 (2005): 199-222. JSTOR. Web.
12
Nov. 2013.
·
Babb
explores the societal themes of structural adjustment policies of the World
Bank and IMF. Rather than focus on current themes, this author chooses to
revisit older modes of "modernization and dependency through looking at
recent literature addressing the social dimensions of recent trends".
Radin,
Dagmar. "World Bank Funding and Health Care Sector Performance in Central
and Eastern Europe." International
Political Science Review 9.3
(2008): 325-47.JSTOR. Web. 12 Nov. 2013.
·
"This
article tests hypotheses that those countries that perform better economically,
that are more favorably evaluated by the World Bank, and that have more
effective institutions are also more likely to benefit from World Bank
assistance, through improvements in the performance of their health care
sectors".
Papava,
Vladmir. "On the Role of the International Monetary Fund in the Post-
Communist Transformation of
Georgia." Emerging Markets Finance & Trade 39.5 (2003): 5- 26. JSTOR. Web.
12 Nov. 2013.
·
This particular
piece discusses post-communist independent Georgia and it's advancement with
the help of the IMF, even though there were errors mostly attributed to the
Georgian government.
Banya,
Kingsley, and Juliet Elu. "The World Bank and Financing Higher Education
in Sub-
Saharan Africa." HIgher Education 42.1 (2001): 1-34. JSTOR. Web.
12 Nov. 2013.
·
"This
article critically examines World Bank and other donor agency's policy changes
toward financing of higher education in Sub-Saharan Africa. It concludes that
policy vicissitudes have adversely affected these institutions. The
recommendation is that the unique context of each state play a role in higher
education financial policy formation and implementation."
Bresser
Pereira, Luis Carlos. "Development Economics and the World Bank's
Identity Crisis."Review
of International Political Economy 2.2 (1995): 211-47. JSTOR. Web.
12 Nov. 2013.
·
"In
this article, the author, the Brazilian Finance Minister in the late 1980s,
uses his insights and experience to examine critically the identity crisis of
the World Bank. Trapped by the neo-liberal turn in 1980s, and unable to return
to the Keynesian lending principles of earlier decades, the Bank is claimed to
be facing an unsettled future in terms of its operational philosophy".
Hi Antora
ReplyDeleteThe topic selected is perfect, the relationship between the World Bank and states sovereignty can be established. I would like to know the case studies you will be using. Other than that your topic is perfect and related to the class.