posted on 2024-09-06, 07:18authored byRaphael Kaplinsky, Dorothy McCormick, Mike Morris
This paper focuses on the rapidly-growing links between China and SSA. The
spotlight is placed on three vectors of interaction – trade, foreign investment and
aid. Chinese involvement in Africa is driven predominantly by the quest for material
inputs (oil and other primary commodities) required for its infrastructural investments
and booming manufacturing sector. At least in the early years of this involvement,
there appears to be close coordination between Chinese involvement in
these three related vectors.
Chinese involvement in SSA has important policy implications for growth,
distribution and policy. Whilst it has provided a spur for some of SSA’s key
commodity exporting economies, its impact on manufacturing (both that destined
for domestic and export markets) has been adverse. Even some of the benefits of
the commodity price boom are ambiguous, since these are often associated with
rising exchange rates, corruption and violent conflict. Commodity-based production
also has adverse distributional impacts when compared to manufacturing.
The rapid growth and significance of enhanced Chinese participation in SSA has
important implications for both future research (there are large unknowns and the
picture is changing so rapidly) and for a poverty-focused policy agenda.
Keywords: China; sub-Saharan Africa; trade; investment; textiles.
History
Publisher
IDS
Citation
Kaplinsky, R., D. McCormick & M. Morris (2007) The impact of China on sub-Saharan Africa. Working paper series, 291. Brighton: IDS.
Series
IDS working papers 291
IDS Item Types
IDS Working Paper
Copyright holder
Institute of Development Studies
Country
South Africa; Kenya; Sudan; Swaziland; Namibia; Lesotho; Mozambique; Angola; Sierra Leone; Democratic Republic of Congo; China; Madagascar