Africans Like Markets; Why Don’T They Favor Capitalism?

Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 21 (4):415-422 (2009)
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The recent study of African politics suggests that while African voters tend to be ambivalently positive about democratic reforms, they are even less supportive of market reforms. African states have, if anything, been ahead of their publics in instituting economic reforms. But African leaders have failed to explain or defend these policies to their electorates. This may reflect their own ambivalence—at best—about capitalism.

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