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Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VfUdOREn sDo
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Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Dec 30, 2015

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Godwin Hampton
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Page 1: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Socialism and African Development

PIA 2574

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VfUdOREnsDo

Page 2: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Socialism- One View

Page 3: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Socialism in Africa

At Issue: new look at development strategy?

the role that ideology has played in effecting performance of state

(Anti-Socialism a self-ascribed ideology)

Page 4: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Non-socialist Ideologies

Page 5: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

The Socialist Framework

Dependency as an alternative form of analysis to Modernization

Socialist Assumptions (Redistribution, autarky and collective ownership)

Influence of socialist ideas since 1965

in Africa

Page 6: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

The first assumption is that it is the duty of the community to insure its individual members against individual misfortune.

The second is that, just as the carrying capacity of a bridge is measured by the strength of its weakest support, so the quality of a society should be measured by the quality of life of its weakest members

Page 7: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .
Page 8: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Tanzania’s Ujamaa Policy

President Julius Nyerere

Arusha Declaration: 1967: Socialist Declaration- Control Commanding Heights

Collectivism and Self-Reliance

An approach to agricultural class formation

Page 9: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Tanzania Socialism

Page 10: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Arusha Declaration Celebration 1971

Page 11: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

The 1960s-Voluntary Collective Farms Goal: create villages from small family

households

Self-sustaining economic units of 20-30 families

Primary target- the subsistence farmer

1968- official policy but voluntary

Issue: Forced Settlements

Page 12: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Villagization- Up to 5000 people

Page 13: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

1970s

Goal: Prevention of a rural proletariat

1970- Few villages established

Government Spending only on “ujamaa villages”

Popular Response- poorest areas of the country marginal farming/pastoral areas

Page 14: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .
Page 15: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

After 1973

Targets the wealthier areas and the rich farmers

“Kulaks”

Page 16: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Russian Kulaks

Page 17: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

1975

Forced Collectivization and Collapse of Policy

Page 18: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Problems with Ujamaa

Tanzaphilia- “Socialism and the Field Administrator”

Shift from voluntary to compulsory: “Burning Houses”

Shift from goal of local level decision-making and village autonomy to centralized decision-making and standardized policies

Page 19: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

“What is Tanzaphilia? It is neither a disease nor an exotic flower. It is a political romantic spell: the kind experienced by Western Marxists”

Ali Mazrui

Page 20: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Problems: Collectivization Forced, use of state violence

Villages became very large: 3000-5000 people or more (Resembled State Farms)

Target: Universal villagization by the end of 1976

Resistance from Wealthy Farmers

Result: Food Shortages

Page 21: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Zimbabwe Supermarket c. 2004

Page 22: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Government Reaction

Withdrawal from World System

Drought, Agricultural Mismanagement

Agricultural Collapse

1983- Tanzania Moves Towards Policy Reform

Membership in the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Group

Page 23: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

HIPIC Africa

Page 24: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

SAPS- Increase Capital Flows and Exports, decrease health and education. Food costs increase.

Page 25: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Regime Types in Africa (Crawford Young)

1. African (Socialist) and mixed Economy regimes: pragmatism or African capitalism (Kenya and Senegal in 1960s)

2. Socialist- Populist

(Tanzania, Zambia,

Mozambique in 1970s)

Page 26: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

African Regimes

3. Afro-Marxist or Leninist Vanguard regimes (Angola, Benin 1980s)

4. Marxist-Leninist- (Ethiopia under Dergue)

5.Post-Structural Adjustment Regimes Mozambique, Uganda and Ghana (1990s)

Page 27: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Lenin in Addis, 1992

Page 28: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Attractiveness of an ideology

Impact of Policy on development in the 1980s

Will effect rule making and resource allocation

Ideology does make a difference

Page 29: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Attractiveness of an ideology

There is a measure of internal slack or decision-making authority

A choice that can be made (in terms of dependency) that can be made internally

Thus Socialist Policies can be tested

Page 30: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Evaluation criteria-

Socialism (1965-1985)

Page 31: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Growth

1. Growth is still important- though downplays mineral induced growth and tourism

2. Focus is on peasant based subsistence agriculture rather than export commercial agriculture

Page 32: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Subsistence Agriculture

Page 33: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Result

Import Substitution, inflation and decline of food production

Page 34: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Import Substitution Products in Oman

Page 35: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Equity or distribution: Effects

1. Effect of taxation- especially indirect tax mechanisms (extractive)

2. Pricing policies deflate income for agricultural commodities

3. Relocation of rural resources to urban areas

4. Wage control policies (no strike clauses)

Page 36: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Debates about Urban Bias

Page 37: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Autonomy and self-reliance-

1. Delinkage from the international economy (Autarky)

2. Increased debt burden, continued use of expatriate personnel as planners (often sympathetic)

3. Exploitation of natural resources and foreign exchange outflow

Page 38: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Autarky?

Page 39: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Exploitation of Human Rights

1. Goal- human dignity

2. Reality of repression- movement of peoples

3. Economic and political refugees

4. Increased size of security forces

Page 40: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Human Security Issues

Page 41: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Development capacity: Goals and Results

1. Ability to plan and manage state resources and stimulate economic behavior change

2. Expansion of the social capacity of the state

3. The African disaster- Tyrants, corruption and Skimmed public resources?

Page 42: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Jeanne Kirkpatrick, former Reagan U.N. Ambassador

She is said to have stated, Mobutu “may be a Son of a Bitch but he is our Son of a Bitch”

Page 43: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Socialism

Why has it Failed?

Or Has it?

Page 44: Socialism and African Development PIA 2574 .

Group Presentations