Extending the margins of marketization. Frontier regions and the making of agro-export markets in northern Ghana
This paper demonstrates how the global commodity chain approach has mutated from a critical tool for studying the production of inequality in the global economy to an instrument of development policy that extends the frontiers of marketization to so-called âperipheriesâ in the Global South. Taking a...
Saved in:
Published in | Geoforum Vol. 48; pp. 225 - 235 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Oxford
Pergamon Press
01.08.2013
New York, NY |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
Cover
Loading…
Summary: | This paper demonstrates how the global commodity chain approach has mutated from a critical tool for studying the production of inequality in the global economy to an instrument of development policy that extends the frontiers of marketization to so-called âperipheriesâ in the Global South. Taking an outgrower scheme for the global production of organic mangoes in northern Ghana as point of departure, and situating this case study within the broader context of market experiments in the Ghanaian agricultural sector, it develops an account of global capitalism as a diverse, heterogeneous and messy arrangement of local borderlands. As a zone of inclusive exclusion these borderlands are brought into being by an economic discourse which separates the inside of the capitalist world from its supposed outside. The so-called integration of smallholders into global markets relies on exclusionary representations and the forging of new associations. First, economic practices in northern Ghana are portrayed by economists as defective and in doing so determine what lies outside the market. Second, within this âoutsideâ â on which the âinsideâ actually depends â global capitalism mediated through the market models and rhetoric of international development organizations now literally touches the ground in specific geographical settings. Hence Frontier regions as represented by our case study bear the paradoxical character of the work of economics and are an instructive example for the performative power of economic theories. Marketization is revealed as a complex and socio-technically entangled process full of hidden prerequisites and unforeseen consequences that open up new social spaces of multiple ontological reconfigurations. All rights reserved, Elsevier |
---|---|
Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-2 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-1 content type line 23 ObjectType-Article-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 |
ISSN: | 0016-7185 1872-9398 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.geoforum.2012.01.011 |