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States, Money and the Persistence of Colonial Financial Hierarchies in British West Africa

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  • Nick Bernards

Abstract

This article contributes to debates about the persistence of colonial hierarchies in global finance by examining the reproduction of key features of colonial monetary and financial systems through the end of formal colonialism in West Africa, with a focus on Ghana. The article draws together engagements with Marxian theories of money and of the colonial state, and an examination of a key period which has often not received sufficient direct attention in debates about colonialism and financial subordination: the breakdown and end of formal colonial rule, roughly between 1930 and 1960. The central puzzle addressed in this article is how, despite the explicit desire on the part of nationalist political leaders to overturn colonial financial systems, these wound up being reproduced through the negotiation of political independence. The article shows how the entanglements of colonial monetary and financial systems with processes of state formation posed severe limits on efforts to articulate a ‘developmental’ colonialism after World War II. Efforts to work around these limits ultimately reinforced the reliance of the colonial and postcolonial state on extractive and hierarchical structures of global finance. In short, the article shows how the contradictory position of the state in colonial capitalism is vital to understanding the persistence of colonial monetary and financial structures.

Suggested Citation

  • Nick Bernards, 2023. "States, Money and the Persistence of Colonial Financial Hierarchies in British West Africa," Development and Change, International Institute of Social Studies, vol. 54(1), pages 64-86, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:bla:devchg:v:54:y:2023:i:1:p:64-86
    DOI: 10.1111/dech.12745
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    References listed on IDEAS

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