What Are Saps?: (Leftwitch, 1996)
What Are Saps?: (Leftwitch, 1996)
What Are Saps?: (Leftwitch, 1996)
SAPs?
Overview
Purpose of SAPs
In theory, SAPs are intended to make structural changes which will hopefully provide
long-term solutions to some of the problems facing developing countries by helping
them to acieve economic economic stability and sustained growth. To its proponents,
structural adjustment is a forward-looking, long-term solution to underdevelopment.
SAPs were created in response to the failure of so many “Band-Aid” projects and
programs which only reacted to crises instead of taking a proactive, stance, seeking to
preempt crises before they appear by “addressing the nature of the problem.” (Finch,
1985).
One of the most important purpose of SAPs is to make the economy less vulnerable to
future shocks. This can be done by increasing flexibility and adaptability (Streeten, 1987).
The World Bank and the IMF consider structural adjustment to be a logical - and in
many cases inevitable - means to achieve sustained economic growth and address
long-term development needs. SAPs generally include the following elements:
Typically, by the time countries seek adjustment loans, they have suffered from high
deficits, rapid inflation, and capital flight. Many countries came to realize that the
problems were fundamental, requiring economic reforms. However, with having
many serious economic problems, many countries could not carry on reforms by
themselves as before at this time because no one was willing to finance them to do
so (Stewart, 1995). To ensure a continued flow of funds, countries already devastated by
debt obligations have very little choice but to adhere to conditions guided by the
World Bank and IMF. Loans under SAPs were virtually the only source of quick-
disbursing foreign exchange available after the economic crisis since the flow of
commercial loans was drastically reduced. The price paid by developing countries to
gain access to foreign exchange in this situation was to agree to significant policy
reform under SAPs (Weaver, 1995). They had to stabilize their economy first as quickly
as possible, so as to attract foreign capital, hoping that structural changes would
overcome short-term imbalances and eventually promote economic growth, especially
sustainable growth.
Role of Major Agencies
The World Bank havs been the most important agency providing adjustment loans.
However,
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) also moved into structural adjustment
lending with the establishment of the Structural Adjustment Facility in 1986 to
provide additional support for low-income countries. Most bilateral aid agencies like
the United States Agency for International Development also moved significant
proposions pf their portfolios to policy-based assistance.
World Bank
The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, frequently called the
"World Bank" was established in July 1944 at the United Nations Monetary and
Financial Conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, USA. The World Bank
opened for business on June 25, 1946. The World Bank’s goal is to reduce poverty
and improve living standards by promoting sustainable growth and investments in
people. The Bank provides loans, technical assistance and policy guidance to help its
developing-country members achieve this objective. The World Bank group of
institutions includes:
The World Bamk has become the promary financier of development projects in them
Third World. It has also become the Third World's largest creditor. Together the
countries of the Third World owe the World Bank more than US 160 billion.
The World Bank is currently the largest multi-national lending and techinical agency
dealing with Third World development. As the world's lending development agency,
the World bank has a wide-ranging mandate, from consolidating loans for large scale
development projects to providing structural adjustment loans and sectoral adjustment
loans to developing countries experiencing balance of payments problems.
In the 1980s, in the large part owing to the debt crisis, the Bank increasingly served as
a debt-management institution through structural adjustment programs (SCN community
Links).
The IMF achieves these objectives by advising member countries on their economic
policies and by providing conditional assistance to member countries experiencing
balance of payment problems.
The IMF played a significant role during the 1980s in "bailing out the commercial
banks." By providing IMF credits to developing countries, essentially to sevrve
commercial debt, the IMF took upon itself the role of "gatekeeper" for creditors,
forcing highly indebted countries to adopt SAPs as a condition not only for receiving
IMF credits, but as the "stamp of approval" debtor countries needed as a condition for
receiving futher grants and aid from all donor sources (SCN Community Links).
Major Criticism of SAPs
Overview
Environmental Impacts
Overview
One of the major criticism on SAPs is that they have actually hurt the poor, deepened
poverty and increased the gap between rich and poor in both local and global terms.
Initially, SAPs were viewed as a temporary measure, to be used for three to five years,
to restore sustainable balance of payment in recipient countries. In the beginning, and
negative effects on poorer people were thought to be “transitional”. However, severe
and painful negative impacts on the poor became apparent in short-term. Some
observers say that SAPs lead to unsustainable resource exploitation and environmental
destruction. SAPs have paid little attention to their environmental impact. SAPs call
for increased to generate foreign exchange to service debt. The acceleration of
resource extraction and commodity production that results as countries increase
exports is not ecologically sustainable. Another criticism of SAPs is that their top-
down styles of development undermine national sovereignty and impose of the
Western Neo-classical model in a context where it may not be applicable. To ensure a
continued flow of funds, countries already devastated by debt obligations have very
little choice but to adhere to the conditions guided by the IMF, the World Bank and
other major donors.
It is universally accepted that "social" concerns like health and education are greatly
impacted by SAPs. Most often, when governments are told to reduce public
expenditure, the first budget to be cut are those of health, education, and welfare.
Since the wealthy and powerful can afford private medical care or education, they
remain largely unaffected by cuts in budgets while vulnerable sectors including
women, children, the elderly and minorities suffer the most from the short-term
inpacts of SAPs due to sharp cuts in public expenditure.
The reductions in living standards of the poor are likely to be more serious in
countries with low average incomes per capita, partly because incomes are already
low, and even across the board cuts will drive many below the poverty line. Also,
partly because these countries tend to be less flexible and responsive to shocks, they
therefore have to deflate by more for any given correction in the balance of
payments (Streeten, 1987).
Some analysts even believe that structural adjustment programs are a World Bank
policy tool used to subjugate the developing economies and “adjust” them so they
better serve the purposes of the rich industrialized nations. These people are of the
opinion that SAPs are the Western financial system’s attempt to open new markets for
its goods and to create the conditions under which the Third World will continue to
repay its debts to the North’s commercial banks and multilateral lending institutions,
and to provide cheap raw materials for the industrial engines of the First World. The
policies of SAPs focus narrowly on domestic economic adjustment and stabilization
of economy that actually served for the developed countries’ primary self-interest to
sustain development of global economy. In addition, the donor agencies insist in the
argument that democratization in the context of a “free market” economy would
compel government to be more accountable, less corrupt and thus more efficient in
order to promote development since they would be judged on their performance and
thrown out if they did not effectively deliver the needs of the public. Strongly
encouraging democratization to the world, as if it is the only form to foster
development, these agencies actually fail to consider non-democratic government’s
capacity to solve their economic, social and political problems.
Environmental Impacts
The environmental impacts of adjustment processes are mixed. Some of the price
reforms have positive environmental impacts, for example, by intensifying
commercial agricultural production, promoting less-erosive crop mixes, and reducing
subsidies for agricultural inputs. Others have negative outcomes, as exemplified by
widespread extension of substance farming, acceleration of deforestation, and
overtaxing of soil productivity. Downward pressures on living standards and
informalization of the economy have obliged many urban and rural poor to increase
their reliance and pressures on natural resources and environmental services just to
survive(Reed, 1996). The environmental impacts of SAPs differ according to the kind of
economy undergoing reform, that is, whether they are extractive, agricultural,
manufacturing, or information/service economies.
Lessons Learned
Much of the blame rests with the economic crisis that preceded SAPs, but clearly the
adjustment policies themselves contributed significantly to the increase of poverty,
and the decline of quality of social sectors such as education, health, welfare and
environment. Many other international development agencies including NGOs and
United Nations institutions have critically reported negative aspects of SAPs. On-
going discussions, evaluations, and criticisms especially focusing on SAPs’ negative
impacts have had strong influence on changes in the approach of the major donor
agencies such as the World Bank and IMF. For example, the World bank emphasizes
that poverty reduction, income distribution, and human/social development have been
adopted into the Bank’s operational policy on SAPs. Now that the importance of
protecting social sectors and living standards is more widely recognized, one might
hope that economic reform will be designed to ease human suffering, not contribute to
it (Adepoju 1993).
Here are some recommendations for the future which have been discussed.
The World Bank / IMF have stated that in the long run, SAPs will enhance growth,
and provide better access to jobs and social services. Through empowerment and
participation in the decisions that affect their lives, the poor can emerge from
poverty (Picciotto, 1996). If these necessary policy reforms can be successfully
accomplished, structural adjustment reforms will benefit the poor in the long run
through the stabilization and growth of economy (Weaver, 1995).