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Chapter Five - Operating Goals for a Systemic Economic Policy

from Part Two - Goals and Instruments for a Systemic Economic Policy for Africa's Revival

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2014

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Summary

“Growth demands a stable, but flexible, political and social framework, capable of accommodating rapid structural change and resolving the conflicts that it generates, while encouraging the growth-promoting groups in society.”

Simon Kuznets, Nobel Prize laureate in economics, prize lecture, 1971

“In countries operating a largely capitalist system, there does not seem to be a wide understanding among its actors and overseers of either its advantages or its hazards. In the past, ignorance of what it can contribute led some countries to throw out the system or clip its wings. Ignorance of the hazards made imprudence in markets and policy neglect all the more likely. Regaining a well-functioning capitalism will require re-education and deep reform.”

Edmund Phelps, Nobel Prize laureate in economics, Financial Times, April 15, 2009

Introduction

In the first part of this book, I demonstrated the role of operating goals in the conceptual framework of economic policy. My goal in this chapter is to point out the operating goals that the officials in charge of economic policy in African countries should target. The operating goals are tactical targets that the officials in charge of economic policy can best influence in order to achieve the intermediate goals. They are closer to the instruments, which are the means of action directly in their hands. They are also linked to intermediate goals by a relationship of cause and effect, which is easier to understand than that which may exist between the instruments and intermediate goals.

Type
Chapter
Information
Africa and Economic Policy
Speculation and Risk Management on the Fringes of Empire
, pp. 67 - 90
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2014

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