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      Bank corruption becomes site of struggle in Mozambique

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      Review of African Political Economy
      Review of African Political Economy
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            Abstract

            Three people have been murdered for investigating corruption in the Mozambican banking system and the loss of more than $400 million. All countries use banks politically, and in Mozambique, the banks were first used to build socialism, then to keep the country running during the war, and finally in the new capitalist era to promote local entrepreneurs and keep the economy out of foreign hands. But the nature of socialist banking and the process of transition combined to create the conditions under which powerful individuals could use the banking system for accumulation. But this has been contested, and there is an ongoing struggle within the elite between those groups which back what Peter Evans calls the ‘predatory’ and ‘developmental’ states. The recent murders suggest this contest is becoming more acute. Finally, we note that a key role has been played by the international financial institutions, which in their doctrinaire opposition to any serious role for the state chose to back the predatory state faction.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Journal
            crea20
            CREA
            Review of African Political Economy
            Review of African Political Economy
            0305-6244
            1740-1720
            March 2002
            : 29
            : 91
            : 53-72
            Affiliations
            a Research fellow in the Development Policy and Prace group , Open University , Milton Keynes , UK , author of five books on Mozambique E-mail: j.hanlon@ 123456open.ac.uk
            Article
            8704584 Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 29, No. 91, March 2002, pp. 53-72
            10.1080/03056240208704584
            3167d1a6-2311-4487-b17e-923eee44949f

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            History
            Page count
            Figures: 0, Tables: 0, References: 15, Pages: 20
            Categories
            Original Articles

            Sociology,Economic development,Political science,Labor & Demographic economics,Political economics,Africa

            References

            1. Banco Português de Investimento. . 1996. . BPD ‐ Banco Popular de Desenvolvimento SARL, Memorando de Venda .

            2. Evans Peter. . 1995. . Embedded autonomy: states and industrial transformation . , Princeton : : Princeton University Press. .

            3. Hanlon Joseph. . 1984. . Mozambique: the revolution under fire . , London : : Zed. .

            4. 1991. . Mozambique: Who Calls the Shots . , Oxford : : James Currey. .

            5. 1996. . Peace Without Profit: How the IMF Blocks Rebuilding in Mozambique . , Oxford : : James Currey. .

            6. 2000. . ‘Power without responsibility: the World Bank & Mozambican cashew nuts’. . Review of African Political Economy . , Vol. 83:: 29––45. .

            7. IMF. . 30 May 1996. 1996 . ‘Republic of Mozambique: Request for Arrangements Under the Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility’ . 30 May 1996. ,

            8. KPMG. . 2001. . ‘Avaliação da Carteira de Créditor e Outros Activos’ . Maputo :

            9. Landau Luis. . 1998. . Rebuilding the Mozambican Economy . , Washington : : Country Assistance Review, World Bank Operations Evaluation Department. .

            10. Riley Stephen. . 1998. . ‘The political economy of anti‐corruption strategies in Africa’. . The European Journal of Development Research . , Vol. 10.1:: 129––59. .

            11. Hope K R and Chikulo B C. , eds. 2000. . “‘Western policies and African realities: the new anti‐corruption agenda’. ”. In Corruption and Development in Africa . , Basingstoke : : Macmillan. .

            12. Szeftel Morris. . 2000a. . ‘Between governance & underdevelopment: Accumulation & Africa's ‘catastrophic corruption”. . Review of African Political Economy . , Vol. 84:: 287––306. .

            13. 2000b. . ‘Clientelism, corruption & catastrophe’. . Review of African Political Economy . , Vol. 85:: 427––441. .

            14. World Bank. . 1990. . ‘Mozambique Country Economic Memorandum’ .

            15. Wuyts Marc. . 1986. . ‘Money and planning for socialist transition: The Mozambican Experience’ . , Milton Keynes : : Open University. .

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