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      The hidden economy: informal and parallel trade in Northwestern Uganda

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      Review of African Political Economy
      Review of African Political Economy
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            Abstract

            This study of informal and parallel trade in Uganda's Arua District shows that such trade has a long history back through colonialism. Its roots do not lie in the distortions of post‐colonial state intervention, as the current conventional view would have it, but in the activities of the colonial state in imposing borders and divergent currencies and in implementing trading networks. More recently and as part of adjustment programmes, attempts to shift incomes from traders to farmers, by raising producer prices and taxing traders’ incomes, have resulted in traders shifting to parallel markets over the border in Zaire. One such market in Ariwara is analysed and shown to involve trade in visible manufacturers and foodstuffs and more crucially in gold, US dollars and coffee. Conventional views that parallel trade is limited to export crops, and that such cross‐border smuggling is on barter terms, are shown to be greatly mistaken, given the existence of a multi‐product market lubricated by a sophisticated multi‐currency and gold market. In conditions of shortage, where alternative supply channels exist, policies of ‘structural adjustment’ which fail to take the basis of these parallel markets into account, will not succeed.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Journal
            crea20
            CREA
            Review of African Political Economy
            Review of African Political Economy
            0305-6244
            1740-1720
            Spring 1990
            : 17
            : 47
            : 64-83
            Affiliations
            a Institute for Social and Economic Research , University of Zaria , Nigeria
            Article
            8703848 Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 17, No. 47, Spring 1990, pp. 64-83
            10.1080/03056249008703848
            f68c6dea-8729-4f6c-a6b8-a1cb891b59a8

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            History
            Page count
            Figures: 0, Tables: 0, References: 14, Pages: 20
            Categories
            Original Articles

            Sociology,Economic development,Political science,Labor & Demographic economics,Political economics,Africa

            Bibliographic note

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            2. Brett E.A.. 1973. . Colonialism and Underdevelopment in East Africa 1919–1939 . , London : : Heinemann. .

            3. Clough P.. ‘Grain Marketing in Northern Nigeria’. . Review of African Political Economy . , Vol. 34((16–34))

            4. Economist Intelligence Unit. . 1988. . Uganda, Ethiopia, Somalia, Djibouti Country Report No.1 & 2 .

            5. Feher F.. 1983. . Dictatorship over Needs . , New York : : St.Martin's Press. .

            6. Igue O.J.. 1977. . “‘Le commerce de contrebande et les problemes monetaires en Afrique occidentale’. ”. Centre de Formation Administrative et de Perfectionnement, Universite Nationale du Benin. .

            7. Kornai J.. 1980. . Economics of Shortage . Vol. Vol.B. , North Holland :

            8. July. 1979 . “‘Resource Constrained vs Demand Constrained Systems’. ”. July. , Institute for International Economic Studies, University of Stockholm. .

            9. Middleton J.. 1962. . “‘Trade and Markets among the Lugbara of Uganda’. ”. In Markets in Africa . Edited by: Bohannan P. and Dalton G..

            10. Powesland P.G.. 1957. . Economic Policy and Labour . , (East African Studies No.10). Kampala : : East African Institute of Social Research. .

            11. Reeves E.B.. October. 1984 . An Indigenous Rural Marketing System in North Kordofan, Sudan . , (Report No.3). October. , INTSORMIL. .

            12. Soghayroun I.E.. 1981. . The Sudanese Muslim Factor in Uganda . , Khartoum : : Khartoum University Press. .

            13. Wilson K.. “‘The Lutaya Expedition: A Report on Research in Yei River District, South Sudan’. ”. (Refugee Studies Programme, Occasional Paper No.1). Oxford : : Queen Elizabeth House. .

            14. Van Zwanenberg R. and King A.. 1975. . An Economic History of Kenya and Uganda 1800–1970 . , Macmillan. .

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