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References: What Drives China’s Growing Role in Africa?
Written by: International Monetary FundArticle Overview: REFERENCES
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Free Download - References: Stock Market Development in Sub-Saharan Africa By International Monetary Fund |
References: What Drives China’s Growing Role in Africa?
Alden, Chris, 2005, “China in Africa,” Survival, Vol. 47 (No. 3), pp. 147–64.
Bosshard, Peter, 2007, “China’s Role in Financing African Infrastructure,” International
River Network, http://www.irn.org.
Broadman, Harry G., 2007, Africa’s Silk Road: China and India’s New Economic Frontier
(Washington: World Bank).
Center for Chinese Study [CFCS], 2006, China’s Interest and Activity in Africa’s
Construction and Infrastructure Sectors (South Africa: Stellenbosch University).
ECOWAS-SWAC/OECD, 2006, “Africa and China,” Economic Series of the Atlas on
Regional Integration in West Africa, http://www.atlas.westafrica.org.
Edwards, Chris, and Rhys. Jenkins, 2005, The Effect of China and India’s Growth and Trade
Liberation and Poverty in Africa, IDS/Enterplan.
Ellis, Linden J., 2007, “China Exim Bank in Africa,” China Environmental Forum, March
22, 2007, Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars, http://www.wilsoncenter.org.
Goldstein, Andrea, Nicolas Pinaud, Helmut Reisen, and Xiabao Chen, 2006, The Rise of
China and India: What Is in it for Africa? (Paris: OECD).
He, Wenping, 2006, “China-Africa Relations Moving into an Era of Rapid Development,” in:
Africa Institute of South Africa, Inside AISA, Oct./Dec., pp. 3–6.
__________, 2007, “China Loans to Africa Won’t Cause Debt Crisis,” China Daily, June 6.
International Monetary Fund, 2007, Regional Economic Outlook: Sub-Saharan Africa
(Washington: IMF).
Jenkins, Rhys, and Chris Edwards, 2007, “The Economic Impacts of China and India on sub-
Saharan Africa: Trends and Prospects,” Journal of Asian Economics, vol. 17, pp.
207–225.
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Country Trade,” photocopy (Sussex University: Institute for Development Studies).
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Challenges,” Center for Global Development, http://www.cgdev.org.
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Africa,” Online Africa Policy Forum (Washington: Center for Strategic and
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Taylor, Ian, 1998, “China’s Foreign Policy Towards Africa in the 1990s,” Journal of Modern
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PBC and CDB, 2007, “Development Financing and China-Africa Cooperation—Concept
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seminar during the African Development Bank Annual Meetings, Shanghai.
Yang, Lihua, 2004, “Sino-Africa Economic Cooperation: An Analysis of Trends and
Developments” (Beijing: Institute of West Asia and Africa, Chinese Academy of
Social Science), http://iwaas.cass.cn.
Wang, Jian-Ye, Mario Mansilla, Yo Kikuchi, and Siddhartha Choudhury, 2005, Officially
Supported Export Credits in a Changing World (Washington: International Monetary
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__________, with Iyabo Masha, Kazuko Shirono, Leighton Harris, 2007, “The Common
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Working Paper WP/07/158 (Washington: International Monetary Fund).
World Bank, 2004, “The Challenge of Financing Infrastructure in Developing Countries,”
Chapter 6 in World Development Finance 2004 (Washington: World Bank).
__________, 2007, “Financial Flows to Developing Countries: Recent Trends and
Prospects,” Chapter 2 in World Development Finance 2007 (Washington: World
Bank)
World Economic Forum, 2007, Africa Competitiveness Report 2007 (Washington: World
Bank), http://www.weforum.org/africacompetitiveness.
IMF Working Paper
African Department
What Drives China’s Growing Role in Africa?
Prepared by Jian-Ye Wang
October 2007
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About the Author: International Monetary Fund RSS for International's articles - Visit International's website The IMF is an international organization of 185 member countries. It was established to promote international monetary cooperation, exchange stability, and orderly exchange arrangements; to foster economic growth and high levels of employment; and to provide temporary financial assistance to countries to help ease balance of payments adjustment. Since the IMF was established its purposes have remained unchanged but its operations—which involve surveillance, financial assistance, and technical assistance—have developed to meet the changing needs of its member countries in an evolving world economy. Click here to visit International's website VII D Promote Institutional Investors PROMOTING STOCK MARKET DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICA VII B Demutualization PROMOTING STOCK MARKET DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICA Fiscal Policy for a Sustainable Environment 43 Accompanying Measures Microfinance in Africa Experience and Lessons from Selected African Countries IV THE STOCK MARKET AND THE FINANCING OF CORPORATE GROWTH IN AFRICA |
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