@article{oai:jicari.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000878, author = {Leipziger, Danny and Yusuf, Shahid}, issue = {8}, journal = {Working paper prepared for JICA/IPD Africa Task Force Meeting, Working paper prepared for JICA/IPD Africa Task Force Meeting}, month = {Jun}, note = {Following decolonization, growth accelerated in the leading African economies with the emergence of industrial activity, the modernization of physical infrastructure, and the quickening of urbanization. However, by the mid-1970s this initial phase of catching up had run out of steam, and African countries entered a long economic twilight that extended through the mid-1990s. Since then, and for over a decade, Africa, has benefitted from a widely shared revival of economic activity. Some reasons for this revival are shared worldwide, including globalization, innovations triggered by the advent of the Internet and advances in semiconductor/digital technologies, expansionary monetary policies, and by the growth of Asian countries that accelerated industrialization and trade volume. Other causes are internal to Africa, such as greater stability, better-managed macroeconomic policy, more open economies, and improved human development indicators. But this new-found momentum cannot be taken for granted. In particular, the financial crisis of 2008–09 has weakened Africa’s principal Western trading partners. Export-led growth is no longer the recipe for all seasons. This paper sketches a strategy for African late starters that identifies the key objectives and policy initiatives appropriate for a post-financial-crisis environment where South-South trade and capital flows are taking on a greater salience.}, pages = {1--30}, title = {GROWTH STRATEGIES FOR AFRICA IN A CHANGING GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT: Policy observations for sustainable and shared growth}, year = {2013} }