The role of the state in Sino-Ghanaian relations: The case of Bui hydroelectric dam
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
This article critically examines the dominant role of the state at the level of
institutions and policies with China to leverage and shape the developmental out comes of the current relationship. The new win–win relationship has sparked intense
debates, which have attracted the reflections of academics and policy makers and
Sino-Africa relations in recent decades. Firstly, that China’s African intervention serves
as a catalyst for the continent’s transformation and hence provides the continent
opportunity for self-determination. Secondly, that China’s increasing presence in Africa
is self-centred due to excessive focus on resource extraction and market expansion,
reminiscent of neo-colonial strategies and less developmental. The paper argues that
these simplistic narratives produce a discourse that overly amplify China’s actions and
rarely analyse how African states can harness the opportunities the relationship
entails. It focuses on how to rescue the relationship from being supposed to be one way street and provides a framework for evaluating the outcomes of the relationship
based on African state interventions. The article deploys Ghana’s Bui hydroelectric dam
heuristically as a soft power instrument in an attempt to explicate poor Ghanaian state
institutional capacity and the weaknesses of its actors in their interactions with Chinese
players thus far in building the developmental capacity to sustain economic progress.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
International Political Economy, International Relations, Development Policy