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Guinea and the Ivory Coast– Contrasts in Economic Development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

Guinea and the Ivory Coast are neighbouring, former French colonies in West Africa. Both gained their independence about the same time – Guinea in 1958 and the Ivory Coast in 1960. The contrast in the subsequent economic performance of these two countries with closely corresponding resource endowments is remarkable. The Ivory Coast's gross domestic product has grown at an annual rate of about 8 per cent in real terms. The Guinean economy has stagnated. A review of the economic record of both since independence suggests that three factors were mainly responsible for their strikingly unequal performance: (1) differences in governmental philosophies of mobilisation and organisation of resources; (2) differences in the extent to which foreign markets shaped domestic economic expansion; and (3) differences in the role of foreign entrepreneurs in the national development effort.

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Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1972

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References

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Page 410 note 2 Ibid. tables 4 and 7.

Page 410 note 3 Ibid. table 4.

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Page 413 note 1 Source: Bureau of Mines, U.S. Department of the Interior, Minerals Yearbook, 1969 (Washington, 1971), p. 883,Google Scholar and earlier editions. The 1966 figure for iron ore is an estimate.

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