Aid for Trade (AfT) has gained prominence as an innovative form of donor support in the era of the 'post'-Washington Consensus.This article, however, through critical analysis of AfT discourse within the 'moral economies' of multilateral WTO and bilateral EU-ACP (African, Caribbean and Pacific) negotiations, points to the strategic purposes of donor language in rationalising asymmetric North-South trade systems. Moreover, it questions the 'development' credentials of AfT assistance, given its disbursement to strategically significant middle-income states in relation to Western overseas interventions, private sector activities that have dubious consequences for supposed beneficiaries, and the tying of AfT disbursements to the implementation of inappropriate policies.
http://www.bwpi.manchester.ac.uk/resources/Working-Papers/bwpi-wp-16011.pdf--
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